CVS is the Concurrent Versions System. This is a version control system useful for projects using a central repository to hold files and then track all changes made to those files. These instructions install the client used to manipulate the repository, creation of a repository is covered at Running a CVS Server.
This package is known to build and work properly using an LFS-7.6 systemd platform.
Download (HTTP): http://ftp.gnu.org/non-gnu/cvs/source/stable/1.11.23/cvs-1.11.23.tar.bz2
Download (FTP): ftp://ftp.gnu.org/non-gnu/cvs/source/stable/1.11.23/cvs-1.11.23.tar.bz2
Download MD5 sum: 0213ea514e231559d6ff8f80a34117f0
Download size: 2.9 MB
Estimated disk space required: 32.3 MB
Estimated build time: 0.3 SBU (additional ~20 SBU to run the test suite)
Tcsh-6.18.01, OpenSSH-6.6p1, krb4, MIT Kerberos V5-1.12.2 (for the GSSAPI libraries), ghostscript-9.14, and an MTA (that provides a sendmail command)
CVS will invoke a default text
editor to create a commit message if the -m "Commit message"
parameter was not
used when changes are committed to a repository. CVS looks for the following text editors, in
the order shown below, during configuration to determine the
default. This default can always be overridden by the CVSEDITOR
or EDITOR
environment variables and can be specified directly by passing the
--with-editor=
parameter to the configure script.
<desired text editor>
Re-alpine-2.03 (for Pico)
User Notes: http://wiki.linuxfromscratch.org/blfs/wiki/cvs
By default CVS is statically linked against the Zlib library included in its source tree. This makes it exposed to possible security vulnerabilities in that library. If you want to modify CVS to use the system shared Zlib library, apply the following patch:
patch -Np1 -i ../cvs-1.11.23-zlib-1.patch
Now fix some conflicts with newer libraries and programs:
sed -i -e 's/getline /get_line /' lib/getline.{c,h} && sed -i -e 's/^@sp$/& 1/' doc/cvs.texinfo && touch doc/*.pdf
Install CVS by running the following commands:
./configure --prefix=/usr --docdir=/usr/share/doc/cvs-1.11.23 && make
If you wish to create HTML or text docs from the documentation source files, issue the following command:
make -C doc html txt
To test the results, issue: make
check. This will take quite a while. If you don't
have rsh configured
for access to the host you are building on (or you didn't pass the
--with-rsh=
parameter to the
configure script,
some tests may fail. If you passed the --with-rsh=ssh
parameter to enable ssh as the default remote shell
program, you'll need to issue the following command so that the
tests will complete without any failures:
sed -e 's/rsh};/ssh};/' \ -e 's/g=rw,o=r$/g=r,o=r/' \ -i src/sanity.sh
Now, as the root
user:
make install && make -C doc install-pdf && install -v -m644 FAQ README /usr/share/doc/cvs-1.11.23
If you created any additional documentation, install it by issuing
the following commands as the root
user:
install -v -m644 doc/*.txt /usr/share/doc/cvs-1.11.23 && install -v -m755 -d /usr/share/doc/cvs-1.11.23/html/cvs{,client} && install -v -m644 doc/cvs.html/* \ /usr/share/doc/cvs-1.11.23/html/cvs && install -v -m644 doc/cvsclient.html/* \ /usr/share/doc/cvs-1.11.23/html/cvsclient
~/.cvsrc
is the main CVS configuration file. This file is used by
users to specify defaults for different cvs commands. For example, to
make all cvs diff
commands run with -u
, a user would
add diff -u
to their .cvsrc
file.
~/.cvswrappers
specifies wrappers
to be used in addition to those specified in the CVSROOT/cvswrappers
file in the repository.
~/.cvspass
contains passwords used
to complete logins to servers.
Last updated on 2014-08-25 12:01:12 -0700