1 *vcscommand.txt* vcscommand
2 Copyright (c) Bob Hiestand
4 Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
5 of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to
6 deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the
7 rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or
8 sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
9 furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
11 The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
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15 IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
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22 For instructions on installing this file, type
26 Author: Bob Hiestand <bob.hiestand@gmail.com>
27 Credits: Benji Fisher's excellent MatchIt documentation
29 ==============================================================================
30 1. Contents *vcscommand-contents*
32 Installation : |vcscommand-install|
33 vcscommand Intro : |vcscommand|
34 vcscommand Manual : |vcscommand-manual|
35 Customization : |vcscommand-customize|
36 SSH "integration" : |vcscommand-ssh|
37 Changes from cvscommand : |cvscommand-changes|
38 Bugs : |vcscommand-bugs|
40 ==============================================================================
42 2. vcscommand Installation *vcscommand-install*
44 The vcscommand plugin comprises five files: vcscommand.vim, vcssvn.vim,
45 vcscvs.vim, vcssvk.vim and vcscommand.txt (this file). In order to install
46 the plugin, place the vcscommand.vim, vcssvn.vim, vcssvk.vim, and vcscvs.vim
47 files into a plugin directory in your runtime path (please see
48 |add-global-plugin| and |'runtimepath'|.
50 This help file can be included in the VIM help system by copying it into a
51 'doc' directory in your runtime path and then executing the |:helptags|
52 command, specifying the full path of the 'doc' directory. Please see
53 |add-local-help| for more details.
55 vcscommand may be customized by setting variables, creating maps, and
56 specifying event handlers. Please see |vcscommand-customize| for more
59 ==============================================================================
61 3. vcscommand Intro *vcscommand*
64 The vcscommand plugin provides global ex commands for manipulating
65 version-controlled source files, currently those controlled either by CVS or
66 Subversion. In general, each command operates on the current buffer and
67 accomplishes a separate source control function, such as update, commit, log,
68 and others (please see |vcscommand-commands| for a list of all available
69 commands). The results of each operation are displayed in a scratch buffer.
70 Several buffer variables are defined for those scratch buffers (please see
71 |vcscommand-buffer-variables|).
73 The notion of "current file" means either the current buffer, or, in the case
74 of a directory buffer (such as Explorer or netrw buffers), the directory (and
75 all subdirectories) represented by the the buffer.
77 For convenience, any vcscommand invoked on a vcscommand scratch buffer acts as
78 though it was invoked on the original file and splits the screen so that the
79 output appears in a new window.
81 Many of the commands accept revisions as arguments. By default, most operate
82 on the most recent revision on the current branch if no revision is specified.
84 Each vcscommand is mapped to a key sequence starting with the |<Leader>|
85 keystroke. The default mappings may be overridden by supplying different
86 mappings before the plugin is loaded, such as in the vimrc, in the standard
87 fashion for plugin mappings. For examples, please see
88 |vcscommand-mappings-override|.
90 The vcscommand plugin may be configured in several ways. For more details,
91 please see |vcscommand-customize|.
93 ==============================================================================
95 4. vcscommand Manual *vcscommand-manual*
97 4.1 vcscommand commands *vcscommand-commands*
99 vcscommand defines the following commands:
116 The following commands are specific to CVS files:
130 This command adds the current file to source control. Please note, this does
131 not commit the newly-added file. All parameters to the command are passed to
134 :VCSAnnotate[!] *:VCSAnnotate*
136 This command displays the current file with each line annotated with the
137 version in which it was most recently changed. If an argument is given, the
138 argument is used as a revision number to display. If not given an argument,
139 it uses the most recent version of the file (on the current branch, if under
140 CVS control). Additionally, if the current buffer is a VCSAnnotate buffer
141 already, the version number on the current line is used.
143 If '!' is used, the view of the annotated buffer is split so that the
144 annotation is in a separate window from the content, and each is highlighted
147 For CVS buffers, the 'VCSCommandCVSAnnotateParent' option, if set to non-zero,
148 will cause the above behavior to change. Instead of annotating the version on
149 the current line, the parent revision is used instead, crossing branches if
152 With no arguments the cursor will jump to the line in the annotated buffer
153 corresponding to the current line in the source buffer.
155 :VCSBlame[!] *:VCSBlame*
157 Alias for |:VCSAnnotate|.
159 :VCSCommit[!] *:VCSCommit*
161 This command commits changes to the current file to source control.
163 If called with arguments, the arguments are the log message.
165 If '!' is used, an empty log message is committed.
167 If called with no arguments, this is a two-step command. The first step opens
168 a buffer to accept a log message. When that buffer is written, it is
169 automatically closed and the file is committed using the information from that
170 log message. The commit can be abandoned if the log message buffer is deleted
171 or wiped before being written.
173 Alternatively, the mapping that is used to invoke :VCSCommit (by default
174 |<Leader>|cc, please see |vcscommand-mappings|) can be used in the log message
175 buffer in Normal mode to immediately commit. This is useful if the
176 |VCSCommandCommitOnWrite| variable is set to 0 to disable the normal
177 commit-on-write behavior.
179 :VCSDelete *:VCSDelete*
181 Deletes the current file and removes it from source control. All parameters
182 to the command are passed to the underlying VCS.
186 With no arguments, this displays the differences between the current file and
187 its parent version under source control in a new scratch buffer.
189 With one argument, the diff is performed on the current file against the
192 With two arguments, the diff is performed between the specified revisions of
195 For CVS, this command uses the |VCSCommandCVSDiffOpt| variable to specify diff
196 options. If that variable does not exist, a plugin-specific default is used.
197 If you wish to have no options, then set it to the empty string.
199 For SVN, this command uses the |VCSCommandSVNDiffOpt| variable to specify diff
200 options. If that variable does not exist, the SVN default is used.
201 Additionally, |VCSCommandSVNDiffExt| can be used to select an external diff
204 :VCSGotoOriginal *:VCSGotoOriginal*
206 This command jumps to the source buffer if the current buffer is a VCS scratch
211 Like ":VCSGotoOriginal" but also executes :bufwipeout on all VCS scrach
212 buffers associated with the original file.
216 This command displays extended information about the current file in a new
221 This command locks the current file in order to prevent other users from
222 concurrently modifying it. The exact semantics of this command depend on the
223 underlying VCS. This does nothing in CVS. All parameters are passed to the
228 Displays the version history of the current file in a new scratch buffer. If
229 there is one parameter supplied, it is taken as as a revision parameters to be
230 passed through to the underlying VCS. Otherwise, all parameters are passed to
233 :VCSRemove *:VCSRemove*
235 Alias for |:VCSDelete|.
237 :VCSRevert *:VCSRevert*
239 This command replaces the current file with the most recent version from the
240 repository in order to wipe out any undesired changes.
242 :VCSReview *:VCSReview*
244 Displays a particular version of the current file in a new scratch buffer. If
245 no argument is given, the most recent version of the file on the current
248 :VCSStatus *:VCSStatus*
250 Displays versioning information about the current file in a new scratch
251 buffer. All parameters are passed to the underlying VCS.
254 :VCSUnlock *:VCSUnlock*
256 Unlocks the current file in order to allow other users from concurrently
257 modifying it. The exact semantics of this command depend on the underlying
258 VCS. All parameters are passed to the underlying VCS.
260 :VCSUpdate *:VCSUpdate*
262 Updates the current file with any relevant changes from the repository. This
263 intentionally does not automatically reload the current buffer, though vim
264 should prompt the user to do so if the underlying file is altered by this
267 :VCSVimDiff *:VCSVimDiff*
269 Uses vimdiff to display differences between versions of the current file.
271 If no revision is specified, the most recent version of the file on the
272 current branch is used. With one argument, that argument is used as the
273 revision as above. With two arguments, the differences between the two
274 revisions is displayed using vimdiff.
276 With either zero or one argument, the original buffer is used to perform the
277 vimdiff. When the scratch buffer is closed, the original buffer will be
278 returned to normal mode.
280 Once vimdiff mode is started using the above methods, additional vimdiff
281 buffers may be added by passing a single version argument to the command.
282 There may be up to 4 vimdiff buffers total.
284 Using the 2-argument form of the command resets the vimdiff to only those 2
285 versions. Additionally, invoking the command on a different file will close
286 the previous vimdiff buffers.
290 This command performs "cvs edit" on the current file. Yes, the output buffer
291 in this case is almost completely useless.
293 :CVSEditors *:CVSEditors*
295 This command performs "cvs edit" on the current file.
297 :CVSUnedit *:CVSUnedit*
299 Performs "cvs unedit" on the current file. Again, yes, the output buffer here
300 is basically useless.
302 :CVSWatch *:CVSWatch*
304 This command takes an argument which must be one of [on|off|add|remove]. The
305 command performs "cvs watch" with the given argument on the current file.
307 :CVSWatchAdd *:CVSWatchAdd*
309 This command is an alias for ":CVSWatch add"
311 :CVSWatchOn *:CVSWatchOn*
313 This command is an alias for ":CVSWatch on"
315 :CVSWatchOff *:CVSWatchOff*
317 This command is an alias for ":CVSWatch off"
319 :CVSWatchRemove *:CVSWatchRemove*
321 This command is an alias for ":CVSWatch remove"
323 :CVSWatchers *:CVSWatchers*
325 This command performs "cvs watchers" on the current file.
327 4.2 Mappings *vcscommand-mappings*
329 By default, a mapping is defined for each command. These mappings execute the
330 default (no-argument) form of each command.
333 |<Leader>|cn VCSAnnotate
334 |<Leader>|cN VCSAnnotate!
335 |<Leader>|cc VCSCommit
336 |<Leader>|cD VCSDelete
338 |<Leader>|cg VCSGotoOriginal
339 |<Leader>|cG VCSGotoOriginal!
343 |<Leader>|cr VCSReview
344 |<Leader>|cs VCSStatus
345 |<Leader>|cu VCSUpdate
346 |<Leader>|cU VCSUnlock
347 |<Leader>|cv VCSVimDiff
349 Only for CVS buffers:
352 |<Leader>|cE CVSEditors
353 |<Leader>|ct CVSUnedit
354 |<Leader>|cwv CVSWatchers
355 |<Leader>|cwa CVSWatchAdd
356 |<Leader>|cwn CVSWatchOn
357 |<Leader>|cwf CVSWatchOff
358 |<Leader>|cwf CVSWatchRemove
360 *vcscommand-mappings-override*
362 The default mappings can be overridden by user-provided instead by mapping to
363 <Plug>CommandName. This is especially useful when these mappings collide with
364 other existing mappings (vim will warn of this during plugin initialization,
365 but will not clobber the existing mappings).
367 There are three methods for controlling mapping:
369 First, maps can be overriden for individual commands. For instance, to
370 override the default mapping for :VCSAdd to set it to '\add', add the
371 following to the vimrc:
373 nmap \add <Plug>VCSAdd
375 Second, the default map prefix ('<Leader>c') can be overridden by defining the
376 |VCSCommandMapPrefix| variable.
378 Third, the entire set of default maps can be overridden by defining the
379 |VCSCommandMappings| variable.
382 4.3 Automatic buffer variables *vcscommand-buffer-variables*
384 Several buffer variables are defined in each vcscommand result buffer. These
385 may be useful for additional customization in callbacks defined in the event
386 handlers (please see |vcscommand-events|).
388 The following variables are automatically defined:
390 b:VCSCommandOriginalBuffer *b:VCSCommandOriginalBuffer*
392 This variable is set to the buffer number of the source file.
394 b:VCSCommandCommand *b:VCSCommandCommand*
396 This variable is set to the name of the vcscommand that created the result
399 b:VCSCommandSourceFile *b:VCSCommandSourceFile*
401 This variable is set to the name of the original file under source control.
403 b:VCSCommandVCSType *b:VCSCommandVCSType*
405 This variable is set to the type of the source control. This variable is also
406 set on the original file itself.
407 ==============================================================================
409 5. Configuration and customization *vcscommand-customize*
412 The vcscommand plugin can be configured in several ways: by setting
413 configuration variables (see |vcscommand-options|) or by defining vcscommand
414 event handlers (see |vcscommand-events|). Additionally, the vcscommand plugin
415 supports a customized status line (see |vcscommand-statusline| and
416 |vcscommand-buffer-management|).
418 5.1 vcscommand configuration variables *vcscommand-options*
420 Several variables affect the plugin's behavior. These variables are checked
421 at time of execution, and may be defined at the window, buffer, or global
422 level and are checked in that order of precedence.
425 The following variables are available:
427 |VCSCommandCommitOnWrite|
428 |VCSCommandCVSDiffOpt|
430 |VCSCommandDeleteOnHide|
431 |VCSCommandDiffSplit|
432 |VCSCommandDisableAll|
433 |VCSCommandDisableMappings|
434 |VCSCommandDisableExtensionMappings|
435 |VCSCommandDisableMenu|
437 |VCSCommandEnableBufferSetup|
439 |VCSCommandMapPrefix|
440 |VCSCommandMenuPriority|
442 |VCSCommandResultBufferNameExtension|
443 |VCSCommandResultBufferNameFunction|
446 |VCSCommandSVNDiffExt|
447 |VCSCommandSVNDiffOpt|
449 |VCSCommandVCSTypeOverride|
450 |VCSCommandVCSTypePreference|
452 VCSCommandCommitOnWrite *VCSCommandCommitOnWrite*
454 This variable, if set to a non-zero value, causes the pending commit
455 to take place immediately as soon as the log message buffer is written.
456 If set to zero, only the VCSCommit mapping will cause the pending commit to
457 occur. If not set, it defaults to 1.
459 VCSCommandCVSExec *VCSCommandCVSExec*
461 This variable controls the executable used for all CVS commands If not set,
462 it defaults to "cvs".
464 VCSCommandDeleteOnHide *VCSCommandDeleteOnHide*
466 This variable, if set to a non-zero value, causes the temporary result buffers
467 to automatically delete themselves when hidden.
469 VCSCommandCVSDiffOpt *VCSCommandCVSDiffOpt*
471 This variable, if set, determines the options passed to the diff command of
472 CVS. If not set, it defaults to 'u'.
474 VCSCommandDiffSplit *VCSCommandDiffSplit*
476 This variable overrides the |VCSCommandSplit| variable, but only for buffers
477 created with |:VCSVimDiff|.
479 VCSCommandDisableAll *VCSCommandDisableAll*
481 This variable, if set, prevents the plugin or any extensions from loading at
482 all. This is useful when a single runtime distribution is used on multiple
483 systems with varying versions.
485 VCSCommandDisableMappings *VCSCommandDisableMappings*
487 This variable, if set to a non-zero value, prevents the default command
488 mappings from being set. This supercedes
489 |VCSCommandDisableExtensionMappings|.
491 VCSCommandDisableExtensionMappings *VCSCommandDisableExtensionMappings*
493 This variable, if set to a non-zero value, prevents the default command
494 mappings from being set for commands specific to an individual VCS.
496 VCSCommandEdit *VCSCommandEdit*
498 This variable controls whether the original buffer is replaced ('edit') or
499 split ('split'). If not set, it defaults to 'split'.
501 VCSCommandDisableMenu *VCSCommandDisableMenu*
503 This variable, if set to a non-zero value, prevents the default command menu
506 VCSCommandEnableBufferSetup *VCSCommandEnableBufferSetup*
508 This variable, if set to a non-zero value, activates VCS buffer management
509 mode see (|vcscommand-buffer-management|). This mode means that the
510 'VCSCommandBufferInfo' variable is filled with version information if the file
511 is VCS-controlled. This is useful for displaying version information in the
514 VCSCommandMappings *VCSCommandMappings*
516 This variable, if set, overrides the default mappings used for shortcuts. It
517 should be a List of 2-element Lists, each containing a shortcut and function
518 name pair. The value of the '|VCSCommandMapPrefix|' variable will be added to
521 VCSCommandMapPrefix *VCSCommandMapPrefix*
523 This variable, if set, overrides the default mapping prefix ('<Leader>c').
524 This allows customization of the mapping space used by the vcscommand
527 VCSCommandMenuPriority *VCSCommandMenuPriority*
529 This variable, if set, overrides the default menu priority '' (empty)
531 VCSCommandMenuRoot *VCSCommandMenuRoot*
533 This variable, if set, overrides the default menu root 'Plugin.VCS'
535 VCSCommandResultBufferNameExtension *VCSCommandResultBufferNameExtension*
537 This variable, if set to a non-blank value, is appended to the name of the VCS
538 command output buffers. For example, '.vcs'. Using this option may help
539 avoid problems caused by autocommands dependent on file extension.
541 VCSCommandResultBufferNameFunction *VCSCommandResultBufferNameFunction*
543 This variable, if set, specifies a custom function for naming VCS command
544 output buffers. This function is expected to return the new buffer name, and
545 will be passed the following arguments:
547 command - name of the VCS command being executed (such as 'Log' or
550 originalBuffer - buffer number of the source file.
552 vcsType - type of VCS controlling this file (such as 'CVS' or 'SVN').
554 statusText - extra text associated with the VCS action (such as version
557 VCSCommandSplit *VCSCommandSplit*
559 This variable controls the orientation of the various window splits that
562 If set to 'horizontal', the resulting windows will be on stacked on top of
563 one another. If set to 'vertical', the resulting windows will be
564 side-by-side. If not set, it defaults to 'horizontal' for all but
565 VCSVimDiff windows. VCSVimDiff windows default to the user's 'diffopt'
566 setting, if set, otherwise 'vertical'.
568 VCSCommandSVKExec *VCSCommandSVKExec*
570 This variable controls the executable used for all SVK commands If not set,
571 it defaults to "svk".
573 VCSCommandSVNDiffExt *VCSCommandSVNDiffExt*
575 This variable, if set, is passed to SVN via the --diff-cmd command to select
576 an external application for performing the diff.
578 VCSCommandSVNDiffOpt *VCSCommandSVNDiffOpt*
580 This variable, if set, determines the options passed with the '-x' parameter
581 to the SVN diff command. If not set, no options are passed.
583 VCSCommandSVNExec *VCSCommandSVNExec*
585 This variable controls the executable used for all SVN commands If not set,
586 it defaults to "svn".
588 VCSCommandVCSTypeOverride *VCSCommandVCSTypeOverride*
590 This variable allows the VCS type detection to be overridden on a path-by-path
591 basis. The value of this variable is expected to be a List of Lists. Each
592 item in the high-level List is a List containing two elements. The first
593 element is a regular expression that will be matched against the full file
594 name of a given buffer. If it matches, the second element will be used as the
597 VCSCommandVCSTypePreference *VCSCommandVCSTypePreference*
599 This variable allows the VCS type detection to be weighted towards a specific
600 VCS, in case more than one potential VCS is detected as useable. The format
601 of the variable is either a list or a space-separated string containing the
602 ordered-by-preference abbreviations of the preferred VCS types.
604 5.2 VCSCommand events *vcscommand-events*
606 For additional customization, vcscommand can trigger user-defined events.
607 Event handlers are provided by defining User event autocommands (see
608 |autocommand|, |User|) in the vcscommand group with patterns matching the
611 For instance, the following could be added to the vimrc to provide a 'q'
612 mapping to quit a vcscommand scratch buffer:
615 au User VCSBufferCreated silent! nmap <unique> <buffer> q :bwipeout<cr>
618 The following hooks are available:
620 VCSBufferCreated This event is fired just after a vcscommand
621 result buffer is created and populated. It is
622 executed within the context of the vcscommand
623 buffer. The vcscommand buffer variables may
624 be useful for handlers of this event (please
625 see |vcscommand-buffer-variables|).
627 VCSBufferSetup This event is fired just after vcscommand buffer
628 setup occurs, if enabled.
630 VCSPluginInit This event is fired when the vcscommand plugin
633 VCSPluginFinish This event is fired just after the vcscommand
636 VCSVimDiffFinish This event is fired just after the VCSVimDiff
637 command executes to allow customization of,
638 for instance, window placement and focus.
640 Additionally, there is another hook which is used internally to handle loading
641 the multiple scripts in order. This hook should probably not be used by an
642 end user without a good idea of how it works. Among other things, any events
643 associated with this hook are cleared after they are executed (during
644 vcscommand.vim script initialization).
646 VCSLoadExtensions This event is fired just before the
647 VCSPluginFinish. It is used internally to
648 execute any commands from the VCS
649 implementation plugins that needs to be
650 deferred until the primary plugin is
653 5.3 vcscommand buffer naming *vcscommand-naming*
655 vcscommand result buffers use the following naming convention:
656 [{VCS type} {VCS command} {Source file name}]
658 If additional buffers are created that would otherwise conflict, a
659 distinguishing number is added:
661 [{VCS type} {VCS command} {Source file name}] (1,2, etc)
663 5.4 vcscommand status line support *vcscommand-statusline*
665 It is intended that the user will customize the |'statusline'| option to
666 include vcscommand result buffer attributes. A sample function that may be
667 used in the |'statusline'| option is provided by the plugin,
668 VCSCommandGetStatusLine(). In order to use that function in the status line, do
669 something like the following:
671 set statusline=%<%f\ %{VCSCommandGetStatusLine()}\ %h%m%r%=%l,%c%V\ %P
673 of which %{VCSCommandGetStatusLine()} is the relevant portion.
675 The sample VCSCommandGetStatusLine() function handles both vcscommand result
676 buffers and VCS-managed files if vcscommand buffer management is enabled
677 (please see |vcscommand-buffer-management|).
679 5.5 vcscommand buffer management *vcscommand-buffer-management*
681 The vcscommand plugin can operate in buffer management mode, which means that
682 it attempts to set a buffer variable ('VCSCommandBufferInfo') upon entry into
683 a buffer. This is rather slow because it means that the VCS will be invoked
684 at each entry into a buffer (during the |BufEnter| autocommand).
686 This mode is disabled by default. In order to enable it, set the
687 |VCSCommandEnableBufferSetup| variable to a true (non-zero) value. Enabling
688 this mode simply provides the buffer variable mentioned above. The user must
689 explicitly include information from the variable in the |'statusline'| option
690 if they are to appear in the status line (but see |vcscommand-statusline| for
691 a simple way to do that).
693 The 'VCSCommandBufferInfo' variable is a list which contains, in order, the
694 revision of the current file, the latest revision of the file in the
695 repository, and (for CVS) the name of the branch. If those values cannot be
696 determined, the list is a single element: 'Unknown'.
698 ==============================================================================
700 6. SSH "integration" *vcscommand-ssh*
702 The following instructions are intended for use in integrating the
703 vcscommand.vim plugin with an SSH-based CVS environment.
705 Familiarity with SSH and CVS are assumed.
707 These instructions assume that the intent is to have a message box pop up in
708 order to allow the user to enter a passphrase. If, instead, the user is
709 comfortable using certificate-based authentication, then only instructions
710 6.1.1 and 6.1.2 (and optionally 6.1.4) need to be followed; ssh should then
713 6.1 Environment settings *vcscommand-ssh-env*
715 6.1.1 CVSROOT should be set to something like:
717 :ext:user@host:/path_to_repository
719 6.1.2 CVS_RSH should be set to:
723 Together, those settings tell CVS to use ssh as the transport when
724 performing CVS calls.
726 6.1.3 SSH_ASKPASS should be set to the password-dialog program. In my case,
727 running gnome, it's set to:
729 /usr/libexec/openssh/gnome-ssh-askpass
731 This tells SSH how to get passwords if no input is available.
733 6.1.4 OPTIONAL. You may need to set SSH_SERVER to the location of the cvs
734 executable on the remote (server) machine.
736 6.2 CVS wrapper program *vcscommand-ssh-wrapper*
738 Now you need to convince SSH to use the password-dialog program. This means
739 you need to execute SSH (and therefore CVS) without standard input. The
740 following script is a simple perl wrapper that dissasociates the CVS command
741 from the current terminal. Specific steps to do this may vary from system to
742 system; the following example works for me on linux.
746 use POSIX qw(setsid);
747 open STDIN, '/dev/null';
748 fork and do {wait; exit;};
752 6.3 Configuring vcscommand.vim *vcscommand-ssh-config*
754 At this point, you should be able to use your wrapper script to invoke CVS with
755 various commands, and get the password dialog. All that's left is to make CVS
756 use your newly-created wrapper script.
758 6.3.1 Tell vcscommand.vim what CVS executable to use. The easiest way to do this
759 is globally, by putting the following in your .vimrc:
761 let VCSCommandCVSExec=/path/to/cvs/wrapper/script
763 6.4 Where to go from here *vcscommand-ssh-other*
765 The script given above works even when non-SSH CVS connections are used,
766 except possibly when interactively entering the message for CVS commit log
767 (depending on the editor you use... VIM works fine). Since the vcscommand.vim
768 plugin handles that message without a terminal, the wrapper script can be used
771 This allows mixed-mode operation, where some work is done with SSH-based CVS
772 repositories, and others with pserver or local access.
774 It is possible, though beyond the scope of the plugin, to dynamically set the
775 CVS executable based on the CVSROOT for the file being edited. The user
776 events provided (such as VCSBufferCreated and VCSBufferSetup) can be used to
777 set a buffer-local value (b:VCSCommandCVSExec) to override the CVS executable
778 on a file-by-file basis. Alternatively, much the same can be done (less
779 automatically) by the various project-oriented plugins out there.
781 It is highly recommended for ease-of-use that certificates with no passphrase
782 or ssh-agent are employed so that the user is not given the password prompt
785 ==============================================================================
787 7. Changes from cvscommand *cvscommand-changes*
789 1. Require Vim 7 in order to leverage several convenient features; also
790 because I wanted to play with Vim 7.
792 2. Renamed commands to start with 'VCS' instead of 'CVS'. The exceptions are
793 the 'CVSEdit' and 'CVSWatch' family of commands, which are specific to CVS.
795 3. Renamed options, events to start with 'VCSCommand'.
797 4. Removed option to jump to the parent version of the current line in an
798 annotated buffer, as opposed to the version on the current line. This made
799 little sense in the branching scheme used by subversion, where jumping to a
800 parent branch required finding a different location in the repository. It
801 didn't work consistently in CVS anyway.
803 5. Removed option to have nameless scratch buffers.
805 6. Changed default behavior of scratch buffers to split the window instead of
806 displaying in the current window. This may still be overridden using the
807 'VCSCommandEdit' option.
809 7. Split plugin into multiple plugins.
811 8. Added 'VCSLock' and 'VCSUnlock' commands. These are implemented for
812 subversion but not for CVS. These were not kept specific to subversion as they
813 seemed more general in nature and more likely to be supported by any future VCS
814 supported by this plugin.
816 9. Changed name of buffer variables set by commands.
818 'b:cvsOrigBuffNR' became 'b:VCSCommandOriginalBuffer'
819 'b:cvscmd' became 'b:VCSCommandCommand'
821 10. Added new automatic variables to command result buffers.
823 'b:VCSCommandSourceFile'
824 'b:VCSCommandVCSType'
826 ==============================================================================
828 8. Known bugs *vcscommand-bugs*
830 Please let me know if you run across any.
832 CVSUnedit may, if a file is changed from the repository, provide prompt text
833 to determine whether the changes should be thrown away. Currently, that text
834 shows up in the CVS result buffer as information; there is no way for the user
835 to actually respond to the prompt and the CVS unedit command does nothing. If
836 this really bothers anyone, please let me know.
838 VCSVimDiff, when using the original (real) source buffer as one of the diff
839 buffers, uses some hacks to try to restore the state of the original buffer
840 when the scratch buffer containing the other version is destroyed. There may
841 still be bugs in here, depending on many configuration details.
843 vim:tw=78:ts=8:ft=help