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These standard options are supported by rtag
(see section Common command options, for a complete description of
them):
-D date
-
Tag the most recent revision no later than date.
-f
-
Only useful with the `-D date' or `-r tag'
flags. If no matching revision is found, use the most
recent revision (instead of ignoring the file).
-F
-
Overwrite an existing tag of the same name on a
different revision. This option is new in CVS
1.4. The old behavior is matched by `cvs tag -F'.
-l
-
Local; run only in current working directory.
-n
-
Do not run any tag program that was specified with the
`-t' flag inside the `modules' file.
(see section The modules file).
-R
-
Commit directories recursively. This is on by default.
-r tag
-
Only tag those files that contain tag. This can
be used to rename a tag: tag only the files identified
by the old tag, then delete the old tag, leaving the
new tag on exactly the same files as the old tag.
In addition to the above common options, these options
are available:
-a
-
Use the `-a' option to have
rtag
look in the
`Attic' (see section Removing files from a module) for removed files
that contain the specified tag. The tag is removed from
these files, which makes it convenient to re-use a
symbolic tag as development continues (and files get
removed from the up-coming distribution).
-b
-
Make the tag a branch tag. See section Branches.
-d
-
Delete the tag instead of creating it.
In general, tags (often the symbolic names of software
distributions) should not be removed, but the `-d'
option is available as a means to remove completely
obsolete symbolic names if necessary (as might be the
case for an Alpha release, or if you mistagged a
module).
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