kopia lustrzana https://github.com/Hamlib/Hamlib
				
				
				
			
		
			
				
	
	
		
			1788 wiersze
		
	
	
		
			55 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Perl
		
	
	
		
			Executable File
		
	
			
		
		
	
	
			1788 wiersze
		
	
	
		
			55 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Perl
		
	
	
		
			Executable File
		
	
| #!/bin/sh
 | ||
| exec perl -w -x $0 ${1+"$@"} # -*- mode: perl; perl-indent-level: 2; -*-
 | ||
| #!perl -w
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| ##############################################################
 | ||
| ###                                                        ###
 | ||
| ### cvs2cl.pl: produce ChangeLog(s) from `cvs log` output. ###
 | ||
| ###                                                        ###
 | ||
| ##############################################################
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| ## $Revision: 1.1 $
 | ||
| ## $Date: 2001-02-01 00:20:12 $
 | ||
| ## $Author: javabear $
 | ||
| ##
 | ||
| ##   (C) 1999 Karl Fogel <kfogel@red-bean.com>, under the GNU GPL.
 | ||
| ## 
 | ||
| ##   (Extensively hacked on by Melissa O'Neill <oneill@cs.sfu.ca>.)
 | ||
| ##
 | ||
| ## cvs2cl.pl is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
 | ||
| ## it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
 | ||
| ## the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
 | ||
| ## any later version.
 | ||
| ##
 | ||
| ## cvs2cl.pl is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
 | ||
| ## but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
 | ||
| ## MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
 | ||
| ## GNU General Public License for more details.
 | ||
| ##
 | ||
| ## You may have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
 | ||
| ## along with cvs2cl.pl; see the file COPYING.  If not, write to the
 | ||
| ## Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
 | ||
| ## Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| use strict;
 | ||
| use Text::Wrap;
 | ||
| use Time::Local;
 | ||
| use File::Basename;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # The Plan:
 | ||
| #
 | ||
| # Read in the logs for multiple files, spit out a nice ChangeLog that
 | ||
| # mirrors the information entered during `cvs commit'.
 | ||
| #
 | ||
| # The problem presents some challenges. In an ideal world, we could
 | ||
| # detect files with the same author, log message, and checkin time --
 | ||
| # each <filelist, author, time, logmessage> would be a changelog entry.
 | ||
| # We'd sort them; and spit them out.  Unfortunately, CVS is *not atomic*
 | ||
| # so checkins can span a range of times.  Also, the directory structure
 | ||
| # could be hierarchical.
 | ||
| #
 | ||
| # Another question is whether we really want to have the ChangeLog
 | ||
| # exactly reflect commits. An author could issue two related commits,
 | ||
| # with different log entries, reflecting a single logical change to the
 | ||
| # source. GNU style ChangeLogs group these under a single author/date.
 | ||
| # We try to do the same.
 | ||
| #
 | ||
| # So, we parse the output of `cvs log', storing log messages in a
 | ||
| # multilevel hash that stores the mapping:
 | ||
| #   directory => author => time => message => filelist
 | ||
| # As we go, we notice "nearby" commit times and store them together
 | ||
| # (i.e., under the same timestamp), so they appear in the same log
 | ||
| # entry.
 | ||
| #
 | ||
| # When we've read all the logs, we twist this mapping into
 | ||
| # a time => author => message => filelist mapping for each directory.
 | ||
| #
 | ||
| # If we're not using the `--distributed' flag, the directory is always
 | ||
| # considered to be `./', even as descend into subdirectories.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| ############### Globals ################
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # What we run to generate it:
 | ||
| my $Log_Source_Command = "cvs log";
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # In case we have to print it out:
 | ||
| my $VERSION = '$Revision: 1.1 $';
 | ||
| $VERSION =~ s/\S+\s+(\S+)\s+\S+/$1/;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| ## Vars set by options:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # Print debugging messages?
 | ||
| my $Debug = 0;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # Just show version and exit?
 | ||
| my $Print_Version = 0;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # Just print usage message and exit?
 | ||
| my $Print_Usage = 0;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # Single top-level ChangeLog, or one per subdirectory?
 | ||
| my $Distributed = 0;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # What file should we generate (defaults to "ChangeLog")?
 | ||
| my $Log_File_Name = "ChangeLog";
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # Expand usernames to email addresses based on a map file?
 | ||
| my $User_Map_File = "";
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # Output to a file or to stdout?
 | ||
| my $Output_To_Stdout = 0;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # Eliminate empty log messages?
 | ||
| my $Prune_Empty_Msgs = 0;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # Don't call Text::Wrap on the body of the message
 | ||
| my $No_Wrap = 0;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # Separates header from log message.  Code assumes it is either " " or
 | ||
| # "\n\n", so if there's ever an option to set it to something else,
 | ||
| # make sure to go through all conditionals that use this var.
 | ||
| my $After_Header = " ";
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # Format more for programs than for humans.
 | ||
| my $XML_Output = 0;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # Do some special tweaks for log data that was written in FSF
 | ||
| # ChangeLog style.
 | ||
| my $FSF_Style = 0;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # Show times in UTC instead of local time
 | ||
| my $UTC_Times = 0;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # Show day of week in output?
 | ||
| my $Show_Day_Of_Week = 0;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # Show revision numbers in output?
 | ||
| my $Show_Revisions = 0;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # Show tags (symbolic names) in output?
 | ||
| my $Show_Tags = 0;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # Show branches by symbolic name in output?
 | ||
| my $Show_Branches = 0;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # Show only revisions on these branches or their ancestors.
 | ||
| my @Follow_Branches;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # Don't bother with files matching this regexp.
 | ||
| my @Ignore_Files;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # How exactly we match entries.  We definitely want "o",
 | ||
| # and user might add "i" by using --case-insensitive option.
 | ||
| my $Case_Insensitive = 0;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # Maybe only show log messages matching a certain regular expression.
 | ||
| my $Regexp_Gate = "";
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # Pass this global option string along to cvs, to the left of `log':
 | ||
| my $Global_Opts = "";
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # Pass this option string along to the cvs log subcommand:
 | ||
| my $Command_Opts = "";
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # Read log output from stdin instead of invoking cvs log?
 | ||
| my $Input_From_Stdin = 0;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # Don't show filenames in output.
 | ||
| my $Hide_Filenames = 0;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # Max checkin duration. CVS checkin is not atomic, so we may have checkin
 | ||
| # times that span a range of time. We assume that checkins will last no
 | ||
| # longer than $Max_Checkin_Duration seconds, and that similarly, no
 | ||
| # checkins will happen from the same users with the same message less
 | ||
| # than $Max_Checkin_Duration seconds apart.
 | ||
| my $Max_Checkin_Duration = 180;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # What to put at the front of [each] ChangeLog.  
 | ||
| my $ChangeLog_Header = "";
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| ## end vars set by options.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # In 'cvs log' output, one long unbroken line of equal signs separates
 | ||
| # files:
 | ||
| my $file_separator = "======================================="
 | ||
|                    . "======================================";
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # In 'cvs log' output, a shorter line of dashes separates log messages
 | ||
| # within a file:
 | ||
| my $logmsg_separator = "----------------------------";
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| ############### End globals ############
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| &parse_options ();
 | ||
| &derive_change_log ();
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| ### Everything below is subroutine definitions. ###
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # Fills up a ChangeLog structure in the current directory.
 | ||
| sub derive_change_log ()
 | ||
| {
 | ||
|   # See "The Plan" above for a full explanation.
 | ||
|   
 | ||
|   my %grand_poobah;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   my $file_full_path;
 | ||
|   my $time;
 | ||
|   my $revision;
 | ||
|   my $author;
 | ||
|   my $msg_txt;
 | ||
|   my $detected_file_separator;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   # We might be expanding usernames
 | ||
|   my %usermap;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   # In general, it's probably not very maintainable to use state
 | ||
|   # variables like this to tell the loop what it's doing at any given
 | ||
|   # moment, but this is only the first one, and if we never have more
 | ||
|   # than a few of these, it's okay.
 | ||
|   my $collecting_symbolic_names = 0;
 | ||
|   my %symbolic_names;    # Where tag names get stored.
 | ||
|   my %branch_names;      # We'll grab branch names while we're at it.
 | ||
|   my %branch_numbers;    # Save some revisions for @Follow_Branches
 | ||
|   my @branch_roots;      # For showing which files are branch ancestors.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   # Bleargh.  Compensate for a deficiency of custom wrapping.
 | ||
|   if (($After_Header ne " ") and $FSF_Style)
 | ||
|   {
 | ||
|     $After_Header .= "\t";
 | ||
|   }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   if (! $Input_From_Stdin) {
 | ||
|     open (LOG_SOURCE, "$Log_Source_Command |")
 | ||
|         or die "unable to run \"${Log_Source_Command}\"";
 | ||
|   }
 | ||
|   else {
 | ||
|     open (LOG_SOURCE, "-") or die "unable to open stdin for reading";
 | ||
|   }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   %usermap = &maybe_read_user_map_file ();
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   while (<LOG_SOURCE>)
 | ||
|   {
 | ||
|     # If on a new file and don't see filename, skip until we find it, and
 | ||
|     # when we find it, grab it.
 | ||
|     if ((! (defined $file_full_path)) and /^Working file: (.*)/) 
 | ||
|     {
 | ||
|       $file_full_path = $1;
 | ||
|       if (@Ignore_Files) 
 | ||
|       {
 | ||
|         my $base;
 | ||
|         ($base, undef, undef) = fileparse ($file_full_path);
 | ||
|         # Ouch, I wish trailing operators in regexps could be
 | ||
|         # evaluated on the fly!
 | ||
|         if ($Case_Insensitive) {
 | ||
|           if (grep ($file_full_path =~ m|$_|i, @Ignore_Files)) {
 | ||
|             undef $file_full_path;
 | ||
|           }
 | ||
|         }
 | ||
|         elsif (grep ($file_full_path =~ m|$_|, @Ignore_Files)) {
 | ||
|           undef $file_full_path;
 | ||
|         }
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|       next;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     # Just spin wheels if no file defined yet.
 | ||
|     next if (! $file_full_path);
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     # Collect tag names in case we're asked to print them in the output.
 | ||
|     if (/^symbolic names:$/) {
 | ||
|       $collecting_symbolic_names = 1;
 | ||
|       next;  # There's no more info on this line, so skip to next
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     if ($collecting_symbolic_names)
 | ||
|     {
 | ||
|       # All tag names are listed with whitespace in front in cvs log
 | ||
|       # output; so if see non-whitespace, then we're done collecting.
 | ||
|       if (/^\S/) {
 | ||
|         $collecting_symbolic_names = 0;
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|       else    # we're looking at a tag name, so parse & store it
 | ||
|       {
 | ||
|         # According to the Cederqvist manual, in node "Tags", tag
 | ||
|         # names must start with an uppercase or lowercase letter and
 | ||
|         # can contain uppercase and lowercase letters, digits, `-',
 | ||
|         # and `_'.  However, it's not our place to enforce that, so
 | ||
|         # we'll allow anything CVS hands us to be a tag:
 | ||
|         /^\s+([^:]+): ([\d.]+)$/;
 | ||
|         my $tag_name = $1;
 | ||
|         my $tag_rev  = $2;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|         # A branch number either has an odd number of digit sections
 | ||
|         # (and hence an even number of dots), or has ".0." as the
 | ||
|         # second-to-last digit section.  Test for these conditions.
 | ||
|         my $real_branch_rev = "";
 | ||
|         if (($tag_rev =~ /^(\d+\.\d+\.)+\d+$/)   # Even number of dots...
 | ||
|             and (! ($tag_rev =~ /^(1\.)+1$/)))   # ...but not "1.[1.]1"
 | ||
|         {
 | ||
|           $real_branch_rev = $tag_rev;
 | ||
|         }
 | ||
|         elsif ($tag_rev =~ /(\d+\.(\d+\.)+)0.(\d+)/)  # Has ".0."
 | ||
|         {
 | ||
|           $real_branch_rev = $1 . $3;
 | ||
|         }
 | ||
|         # If we got a branch, record its number.
 | ||
|         if ($real_branch_rev)
 | ||
|         {
 | ||
|           $branch_names{$real_branch_rev} = $tag_name;
 | ||
|           if (@Follow_Branches) {
 | ||
|             if (grep ($_ eq $tag_name, @Follow_Branches)) {
 | ||
|               $branch_numbers{$tag_name} = $real_branch_rev;
 | ||
|             }
 | ||
|           }
 | ||
|         }
 | ||
|         else {
 | ||
|           # Else it's just a regular (non-branch) tag.
 | ||
|           push (@{$symbolic_names{$tag_rev}}, $tag_name);
 | ||
|         }
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     # End of code for collecting tag names.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     # If have file name, but not revision, and see revision, then grab
 | ||
|     # it.  (We collect unconditionally, even though we may or may not
 | ||
|     # ever use it.)
 | ||
|     if ((! (defined $revision)) and (/^revision (\d+\.[\d.]+)/))
 | ||
|     {
 | ||
|       $revision = $1;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       if (@Follow_Branches)
 | ||
|       {
 | ||
|         foreach my $branch (@Follow_Branches) 
 | ||
|         {
 | ||
|           # Special case for following trunk revisions
 | ||
|           if (($branch =~ /^trunk$/i) and ($revision =~ /^[0-9]+\.[0-9]+$/))
 | ||
|           {
 | ||
|             goto dengo;
 | ||
|           }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|           my $branch_number = $branch_numbers{$branch};
 | ||
|           if ($branch_number) 
 | ||
|           {
 | ||
|             # Are we on one of the follow branches or an ancestor of
 | ||
|             # same?
 | ||
|             #
 | ||
|             # If this revision is a prefix of the branch number, or
 | ||
|             # possibly is less in the minormost number, OR if this
 | ||
|             # branch number is a prefix of the revision, then yes.
 | ||
|             # Otherwise, no.
 | ||
|             #
 | ||
|             # So below, we determine if any of those conditions are
 | ||
|             # met.
 | ||
|             
 | ||
|             # Trivial case: is this revision on the branch?
 | ||
|             # (Compare this way to avoid regexps that screw up Emacs
 | ||
|             # indentation, argh.)
 | ||
|             if ((substr ($revision, 0, ((length ($branch_number)) + 1)))
 | ||
|                 eq ($branch_number . "."))
 | ||
|             {
 | ||
|               goto dengo;
 | ||
|             }
 | ||
|             # Non-trivial case: check if rev is ancestral to branch
 | ||
|             elsif ((length ($branch_number)) > (length ($revision)))
 | ||
|             {
 | ||
|               $revision =~ /^((?:\d+\.)+)(\d+)$/;
 | ||
|               my $r_left = $1;          # still has the trailing "."
 | ||
|               my $r_end = $2;
 | ||
|               
 | ||
|               $branch_number =~ /^((?:\d+\.)+)(\d+)\.\d+$/;
 | ||
|               my $b_left = $1;  # still has trailing "."
 | ||
|               my $b_mid  = $2;   # has no trailing "."
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|               if (($r_left eq $b_left)
 | ||
|                   && ($r_end <= $b_mid))
 | ||
|               {
 | ||
|                 goto dengo;
 | ||
|               }
 | ||
|             }
 | ||
|           }
 | ||
|         }
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|       else    # (! @Follow_Branches)
 | ||
|       {
 | ||
|         next;
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       # Else we are following branches, but this revision isn't on the
 | ||
|       # path.  So skip it.
 | ||
|       undef $revision;
 | ||
|     dengo:
 | ||
|       next;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     
 | ||
|     # If we don't have a revision right now, we couldn't possibly
 | ||
|     # be looking at anything useful. 
 | ||
|     if (! (defined ($revision))) {
 | ||
|       $detected_file_separator = /^$file_separator$/o;
 | ||
|       if ($detected_file_separator) {
 | ||
|         # No revisions for this file; can happen, e.g. "cvs log -d DATE"
 | ||
|         goto CLEAR;
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|       else {
 | ||
|         next;
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     # If have file name but not date and author, and see date or
 | ||
|     # author, then grab them:
 | ||
|     unless (defined $time) 
 | ||
|     {
 | ||
|       if (/^date: .*/)
 | ||
|       {
 | ||
|         ($time, $author) = &parse_date_and_author ($_);
 | ||
|         if (defined ($usermap{$author}) and $usermap{$author}) {
 | ||
|           $author = $usermap{$author};
 | ||
|         }
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|       else {
 | ||
|         $detected_file_separator = /^$file_separator$/o;
 | ||
|         if ($detected_file_separator) {
 | ||
|           # No revisions for this file; can happen, e.g. "cvs log -d DATE"
 | ||
|           goto CLEAR;
 | ||
|         }
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|       # If the date/time/author hasn't been found yet, we couldn't
 | ||
|       # possibly care about anything we see.  So skip:
 | ||
|       next;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     # A "branches: ..." line here indicates that one or more branches
 | ||
|     # are rooted at this revision.  If we're showing branches, then we
 | ||
|     # want to show that fact as well, so we collect all the branches
 | ||
|     # that this is the latest ancestor of and store them in
 | ||
|     # @branch_roots.  Just for reference, the format of the line we're
 | ||
|     # seeing at this point is:
 | ||
|     #
 | ||
|     #    branches:  1.5.2;  1.5.4;  ...;
 | ||
|     #
 | ||
|     # Okay, here goes:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     if (/^branches:\s+(.*);$/)
 | ||
|     {
 | ||
|       if ($Show_Branches)
 | ||
|       {
 | ||
|         my $lst = $1;
 | ||
|         $lst =~ s/(1\.)+1;|(1\.)+1$//;  # ignore the trivial branch 1.1.1
 | ||
|         if ($lst) {
 | ||
|           @branch_roots = split (/;\s+/, $lst);
 | ||
|         }
 | ||
|         else {
 | ||
|           undef @branch_roots;
 | ||
|         }
 | ||
|         next;
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|       else
 | ||
|       {
 | ||
|         # Ugh.  This really bothers me.  Suppose we see a log entry
 | ||
|         # like this:
 | ||
|         #
 | ||
|         #    ----------------------------
 | ||
|         #    revision 1.1
 | ||
|         #    date: 1999/10/17 03:07:38;  author: jrandom;  state: Exp;
 | ||
|         #    branches:  1.1.2;
 | ||
|         #    Intended first line of log message begins here.
 | ||
|         #    ----------------------------
 | ||
|         #
 | ||
|         # The question is, how we can tell the difference between that
 | ||
|         # log message and a *two*-line log message whose first line is
 | ||
|         # 
 | ||
|         #    "branches:  1.1.2;"
 | ||
|         #
 | ||
|         # See the problem?  The output of "cvs log" is inherently
 | ||
|         # ambiguous.
 | ||
|         #
 | ||
|         # For now, we punt: we liberally assume that people don't
 | ||
|         # write log messages like that, and just toss a "branches:"
 | ||
|         # line if we see it but are not showing branches.  I hope no
 | ||
|         # one ever loses real log data because of this.
 | ||
|         next;
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     # If have file name, time, and author, then we're just grabbing
 | ||
|     # log message texts:
 | ||
|     $detected_file_separator = /^$file_separator$/o;
 | ||
|     if ($detected_file_separator && ! (defined $revision)) {
 | ||
|       # No revisions for this file; can happen, e.g. "cvs log -d DATE"
 | ||
|       goto CLEAR;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     unless ($detected_file_separator || /^$logmsg_separator$/o)
 | ||
|     {
 | ||
|       $msg_txt .= $_;   # Normally, just accumulate the message...
 | ||
|       next;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     # ... until a msg separator is encountered:
 | ||
|     # Ensure the message contains something:
 | ||
|     if ((! $msg_txt)
 | ||
|         || ($msg_txt =~ /^\s*\.\s*$|^\s*$/)
 | ||
|         || ($msg_txt =~ /\*\*\* empty log message \*\*\*/)) 
 | ||
|     {
 | ||
|       if ($Prune_Empty_Msgs) {
 | ||
|         goto CLEAR;
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|       # else
 | ||
|       $msg_txt = "[no log message]\n";
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     ### Store it all in the Grand Poobah:
 | ||
|     {
 | ||
|       my $dir_key;        # key into %grand_poobah
 | ||
|       my %qunk;           # complicated little jobbie, see below
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       # Each revision of a file has a little data structure (a `qunk') 
 | ||
|       # associated with it.  That data structure holds not only the
 | ||
|       # file's name, but any additional information about the file
 | ||
|       # that might be needed in the output, such as the revision
 | ||
|       # number, tags, branches, etc.  The reason to have these things
 | ||
|       # arranged in a data structure, instead of just appending them
 | ||
|       # textually to the file's name, is that we may want to do a
 | ||
|       # little rearranging later as we write the output.  For example,
 | ||
|       # all the files on a given tag/branch will go together, followed
 | ||
|       # by the tag in parentheses (so trunk or otherwise non-tagged
 | ||
|       # files would go at the end of the file list for a given log
 | ||
|       # message).  This rearrangement is a lot easier to do if we
 | ||
|       # don't have to reparse the text.
 | ||
|       #
 | ||
|       # A qunk looks like this:
 | ||
|       #
 | ||
|       #   { 
 | ||
|       #     filename    =>    "hello.c",
 | ||
|       #     revision    =>    "1.4.3.2",
 | ||
|       #     time        =>    a timegm() return value (moment of commit)
 | ||
|       #     tags        =>    [ "tag1", "tag2", ... ],
 | ||
|       #     branch      =>    "branchname" # There should be only one, right?
 | ||
|       #     branchroots =>    [ "branchtag1", "branchtag2", ... ]
 | ||
|       #   }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       if ($Distributed) {
 | ||
|         # Just the basename, don't include the path.
 | ||
|         ($qunk{'filename'}, $dir_key, undef) = fileparse ($file_full_path);
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|       else {
 | ||
|         $dir_key = "./";
 | ||
|         $qunk{'filename'} = $file_full_path;
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       # This may someday be used in a more sophisticated calculation
 | ||
|       # of what other files are involved in this commit.  For now, we
 | ||
|       # don't use it, because the common-commit-detection algorithm is
 | ||
|       # hypothesized to be "good enough" as it stands.
 | ||
|       $qunk{'time'} = $time;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       # We might be including revision numbers and/or tags and/or
 | ||
|       # branch names in the output.  Most of the code from here to
 | ||
|       # loop-end deals with organizing these in qunk.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       $qunk{'revision'} = $revision;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       # Grab the branch, even though we may or may not need it:
 | ||
|       $qunk{'revision'} =~ /((?:\d+\.)+)\d+/;
 | ||
|       my $branch_prefix = $1;
 | ||
|       $branch_prefix =~ s/\.$//;  # strip off final dot
 | ||
|       if ($branch_names{$branch_prefix}) {
 | ||
|         $qunk{'branch'} = $branch_names{$branch_prefix};
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       # If there's anything in the @branch_roots array, then this
 | ||
|       # revision is the root of at least one branch.  We'll display
 | ||
|       # them as branch names instead of revision numbers, the
 | ||
|       # substitution for which is done directly in the array:
 | ||
|       if (@branch_roots) {
 | ||
|         my @roots = map { $branch_names{$_} } @branch_roots;
 | ||
|         $qunk{'branchroots'} = \@roots;
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       # Save tags too.
 | ||
|       if (defined ($symbolic_names{$revision})) {
 | ||
|         $qunk{'tags'} = $symbolic_names{$revision};
 | ||
|         delete $symbolic_names{$revision};
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       # Add this file to the list
 | ||
|       # (We use many spoonfuls of autovivication magic. Hashes and arrays
 | ||
|       # will spring into existence if they aren't there already.)
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       &debug ("(pushing log msg for ${dir_key}$qunk{'filename'})\n");
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       # Store with the files in this commit.  Later we'll loop through
 | ||
|       # again, making sure that revisions with the same log message
 | ||
|       # and nearby commit times are grouped together as one commit.
 | ||
|       push (@{$grand_poobah{$dir_key}{$author}{$time}{$msg_txt}}, \%qunk);
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   CLEAR:
 | ||
|     # Make way for the next message
 | ||
|     undef $msg_txt;
 | ||
|     undef $time;
 | ||
|     undef $revision;
 | ||
|     undef $author;
 | ||
|     undef @branch_roots;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     # Maybe even make way for the next file:
 | ||
|     if ($detected_file_separator) {
 | ||
|       undef $file_full_path;
 | ||
|       undef %branch_names;
 | ||
|       undef %branch_numbers;
 | ||
|       undef %symbolic_names;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|   }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   close (LOG_SOURCE);
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   ### Process each ChangeLog
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   while (my ($dir,$authorhash) = each %grand_poobah)
 | ||
|   {
 | ||
|     &debug ("DOING DIR: $dir\n");
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     # Here we twist our hash around, from being
 | ||
|     #   author => time => message => filelist
 | ||
|     # in %$authorhash to
 | ||
|     #   time => author => message => filelist
 | ||
|     # in %changelog.  
 | ||
|     #
 | ||
|     # This is also where we merge entries.  The algorithm proceeds
 | ||
|     # through the timeline of the changelog with a sliding window of
 | ||
|     # $Max_Checkin_Duration seconds; within that window, entries that
 | ||
|     # have the same log message are merged.
 | ||
|     #
 | ||
|     # (To save space, we zap %$authorhash after we've copied
 | ||
|     # everything out of it.) 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     my %changelog;
 | ||
|     while (my ($author,$timehash) = each %$authorhash)
 | ||
|     {
 | ||
|       my $lasttime;
 | ||
|       my %stamptime;
 | ||
|       foreach my $time (sort {$main::a <=> $main::b} (keys %$timehash))
 | ||
|       {
 | ||
|         my $msghash = $timehash->{$time};
 | ||
|         while (my ($msg,$qunklist) = each %$msghash)
 | ||
|         {
 | ||
|  	  my $stamptime = $stamptime{$msg};
 | ||
|           if ((defined $stamptime)
 | ||
|               and (($time - $stamptime) < $Max_Checkin_Duration)
 | ||
|               and (defined $changelog{$stamptime}{$author}{$msg}))
 | ||
|           {
 | ||
|  	    push(@{$changelog{$stamptime}{$author}{$msg}}, @$qunklist);
 | ||
|           }
 | ||
|           else {
 | ||
|             $changelog{$time}{$author}{$msg} = $qunklist;
 | ||
|             $stamptime{$msg} = $time;
 | ||
|           }
 | ||
|         }
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     undef (%$authorhash);
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     ### Now we can write out the ChangeLog!
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     my ($logfile_here, $logfile_bak, $tmpfile);
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     if (! $Output_To_Stdout) {
 | ||
|       $logfile_here =  $dir . $Log_File_Name;
 | ||
|       $logfile_here =~ s/^\.\/\//\//;   # fix any leading ".//" problem
 | ||
|       $tmpfile      = "${logfile_here}.cvs2cl$$.tmp";
 | ||
|       $logfile_bak  = "${logfile_here}.bak";
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       open (LOG_OUT, ">$tmpfile") or die "Unable to open \"$tmpfile\"";
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     else {
 | ||
|       open (LOG_OUT, ">-") or die "Unable to open stdout for writing";
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     print LOG_OUT $ChangeLog_Header;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     if ($XML_Output) {
 | ||
|       print LOG_OUT "<?xml version=\"1.0\"?>\n\n"
 | ||
|           . "<changelog xmlns=\"http://www.red-bean.com/xmlns/cvs2cl/\">\n\n";
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     foreach my $time (sort {$main::b <=> $main::a} (keys %changelog))
 | ||
|     {
 | ||
|       my $authorhash = $changelog{$time};
 | ||
|       while (my ($author,$mesghash) = each %$authorhash)
 | ||
|       {
 | ||
|         # If XML, escape in outer loop to avoid compound quoting:
 | ||
|         if ($XML_Output) {
 | ||
|           $author = &xml_escape ($author);
 | ||
|         }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|         while (my ($msg,$qunklist) = each %$mesghash)
 | ||
|         {
 | ||
|           my $files               = &pretty_file_list ($qunklist);
 | ||
|           my $header_line;          # date and author
 | ||
|           my $body;                 # see below
 | ||
|           my $wholething;           # $header_line + $body
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|           # Set up the date/author line.
 | ||
|           # kff todo: do some more XML munging here, on the header
 | ||
|           # part of the entry:
 | ||
|           my ($ignore,$min,$hour,$mday,$mon,$year,$wday)
 | ||
|               = $UTC_Times ? gmtime($time) : localtime($time);
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|           # XML output includes everything else, we might as well make
 | ||
|           # it always include Day Of Week too, for consistency.
 | ||
|           if ($Show_Day_Of_Week or $XML_Output) {
 | ||
|             $wday = ("Sunday", "Monday", "Tuesday", "Wednesday",
 | ||
|                      "Thursday", "Friday", "Saturday")[$wday];
 | ||
|             $wday = ($XML_Output) ? "<weekday>${wday}</weekday>\n" : " $wday";
 | ||
|           }
 | ||
|           else {
 | ||
|             $wday = "";
 | ||
|           }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|           if ($XML_Output) {
 | ||
|             $header_line = 
 | ||
|                 sprintf ("<date>%4u-%02u-%02u</date>\n"
 | ||
|                          . "${wday}"
 | ||
|                          . "<time>%02u:%02u</time>\n"
 | ||
|                          . "<author>%s</author>\n",
 | ||
|                          $year+1900, $mon+1, $mday, $hour, $min, $author);
 | ||
|           }
 | ||
|           else {
 | ||
|             $header_line = 
 | ||
|                 sprintf ("%4u-%02u-%02u${wday} %02u:%02u  %s\n\n",
 | ||
|                          $year+1900, $mon+1, $mday, $hour, $min, $author);
 | ||
|           }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|           # Reshape the body according to user preferences.
 | ||
|           if ($XML_Output) 
 | ||
|           {
 | ||
|             $msg = &preprocess_msg_text ($msg);
 | ||
|             $body = $files . $msg;
 | ||
|           }
 | ||
|           elsif ($No_Wrap) 
 | ||
|           {
 | ||
|             $msg = &preprocess_msg_text ($msg);
 | ||
|             $files = wrap ("\t", "	", "$files");
 | ||
|             $msg =~ s/\n(.*)/\n\t$1/g;
 | ||
|             unless ($After_Header eq " ") {
 | ||
|               $msg =~ s/^(.*)/\t$1/g;
 | ||
|             }
 | ||
|             $body = $files . $After_Header . $msg;
 | ||
|           }
 | ||
|           else  # do wrapping, either FSF-style or regular
 | ||
|           {
 | ||
|             if ($FSF_Style)
 | ||
|             {
 | ||
|               $files = wrap ("\t", "        ", "$files");
 | ||
|               
 | ||
|               my $files_last_line_len = 0;
 | ||
|               if ($After_Header eq " ")
 | ||
|               {
 | ||
|                 $files_last_line_len = &last_line_len ($files);
 | ||
|                 $files_last_line_len += 1;  # for $After_Header
 | ||
|               }
 | ||
|               
 | ||
|               $msg = &wrap_log_entry
 | ||
|                   ($msg, "\t", 69 - $files_last_line_len, 69);
 | ||
|               $body = $files . $After_Header . $msg;
 | ||
|             }
 | ||
|             else  # not FSF-style
 | ||
|             {
 | ||
|               $msg = &preprocess_msg_text ($msg);
 | ||
|               $body = $files . $After_Header . $msg;
 | ||
|               $body = wrap ("\t", "        ", "$body");
 | ||
|             }
 | ||
|           }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|           $wholething = $header_line . $body;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|           if ($XML_Output) {
 | ||
|             $wholething = "<entry>\n${wholething}</entry>\n";
 | ||
|           }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|           # One last check: make sure it passes the regexp test, if the
 | ||
|           # user asked for that.  We have to do it here, so that the
 | ||
|           # test can match against information in the header as well
 | ||
|           # as in the text of the log message.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|           # How annoying to duplicate so much code just because I
 | ||
|           # can't figure out a way to evaluate scalars on the trailing
 | ||
|           # operator portion of a regular expression.  Grrr.
 | ||
|           if ($Case_Insensitive) {
 | ||
|             unless ($Regexp_Gate && ($wholething !~ /$Regexp_Gate/oi)) { 
 | ||
|               print LOG_OUT "${wholething}\n";
 | ||
|             }
 | ||
|           }
 | ||
|           else {
 | ||
|             unless ($Regexp_Gate && ($wholething !~ /$Regexp_Gate/o)) { 
 | ||
|               print LOG_OUT "${wholething}\n";
 | ||
|             }
 | ||
|           }
 | ||
|         }
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     if ($XML_Output) {
 | ||
|       print LOG_OUT "</changelog>\n";
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     close (LOG_OUT);
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     if (! $Output_To_Stdout) 
 | ||
|     {
 | ||
|       if (-f $logfile_here) {
 | ||
|         rename ($logfile_here, $logfile_bak);
 | ||
|       } 
 | ||
|       rename ($tmpfile, $logfile_here);
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|   }
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| sub parse_date_and_author ()
 | ||
| {
 | ||
|   # Parses the date/time and author out of a line like: 
 | ||
|   #
 | ||
|   # date: 1999/02/19 23:29:05;  author: apharris;  state: Exp;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   my $line = shift;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   my ($year, $mon, $mday, $hours, $min, $secs, $author) = $line =~
 | ||
|       m#(\d+)/(\d+)/(\d+)\s+(\d+):(\d+):(\d+);\s+author:\s+([^;]+);#
 | ||
|           or  die "Couldn't parse date ``$line''";
 | ||
|   die "Bad date or Y2K issues" unless ($year > 1969 and $year < 2258);
 | ||
|   # Kinda arbitrary, but useful as a sanity check
 | ||
|   my $time = timegm($secs,$min,$hours,$mday,$mon-1,$year-1900);
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   return ($time, $author);
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # Here we take a bunch of qunks and convert them into printed
 | ||
| # summary that will include all the information the user asked for.
 | ||
| sub pretty_file_list ()
 | ||
| {
 | ||
|   if ($Hide_Filenames and (! $XML_Output)) {
 | ||
|     return "";
 | ||
|   }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   my $qunksref = shift;
 | ||
|   my @qunkrefs = @$qunksref;
 | ||
|   my @filenames;
 | ||
|   my $beauty = "";          # The accumulating header string for this entry.
 | ||
|   my %non_unanimous_tags;   # Tags found in a proper subset of qunks
 | ||
|   my %unanimous_tags;       # Tags found in all qunks
 | ||
|   my %all_branches;         # Branches found in any qunk
 | ||
|   my $common_dir = undef;   # Dir prefix common to all files ("" if none)
 | ||
|   my $fbegun = 0;           # Did we begin printing filenames yet?
 | ||
|   
 | ||
|   # First, loop over the qunks gathering all the tag/branch names.
 | ||
|   # We'll put them all in non_unanimous_tags, and take out the
 | ||
|   # unanimous ones later.
 | ||
|   foreach my $qunkref (@qunkrefs) 
 | ||
|   {
 | ||
|     # Keep track of whether all the files in this commit were in the
 | ||
|     # same directory, and memorize it if so.  We can make the output a
 | ||
|     # little more compact by mentioning the directory only once.
 | ||
|     if ((scalar (@qunkrefs)) > 1)
 | ||
|     {
 | ||
|       if (! (defined ($common_dir)))
 | ||
|       {
 | ||
|         my ($base, $dir);
 | ||
|         ($base, $dir, undef) = fileparse ($$qunkref{'filename'});
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|         if ((! (defined ($dir)))  # this first case is sheer paranoia
 | ||
|             or ($dir eq "")
 | ||
|             or ($dir eq "./")
 | ||
|             or ($dir eq ".\\")) 
 | ||
|         {
 | ||
|           $common_dir = "";
 | ||
|         }
 | ||
|         else
 | ||
|         {
 | ||
|           $common_dir = $dir;
 | ||
|         }
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|       elsif ($common_dir ne "")
 | ||
|       {
 | ||
|         # Already have a common dir prefix, so how much of it can we preserve?
 | ||
|         $common_dir = &common_path_prefix ($$qunkref{'filename'}, $common_dir);
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     else  # only one file in this entry anyway, so common dir not an issue
 | ||
|     {
 | ||
|       $common_dir = "";
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     if (defined ($$qunkref{'branch'})) {
 | ||
|       $all_branches{$$qunkref{'branch'}} = 1;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     if (defined ($$qunkref{'tags'})) {
 | ||
|       foreach my $tag (@{$$qunkref{'tags'}}) {
 | ||
|         $non_unanimous_tags{$tag} = 1;
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|   }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   # Any tag held by all qunks will be printed specially... but only if
 | ||
|   # there are multiple qunks in the first place!
 | ||
|   if ((scalar (@qunkrefs)) > 1) {
 | ||
|     foreach my $tag (keys (%non_unanimous_tags)) {
 | ||
|       my $everyone_has_this_tag = 1;
 | ||
|       foreach my $qunkref (@qunkrefs) {
 | ||
|         if ((! (defined ($$qunkref{'tags'})))
 | ||
|             or (! (grep ($_ eq $tag, @{$$qunkref{'tags'}})))) {
 | ||
|           $everyone_has_this_tag = 0;
 | ||
|         }
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|       if ($everyone_has_this_tag) {
 | ||
|         $unanimous_tags{$tag} = 1;
 | ||
|         delete $non_unanimous_tags{$tag};
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|   }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   if ($XML_Output)
 | ||
|   {
 | ||
|     # If outputting XML, then our task is pretty simple, because we
 | ||
|     # don't have to detect common dir, common tags, branch prefixing,
 | ||
|     # etc.  We just output exactly what we have, and don't worry about
 | ||
|     # redundancy or readability.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     foreach my $qunkref (@qunkrefs) 
 | ||
|     {
 | ||
|       my $filename    = $$qunkref{'filename'};
 | ||
|       my $revision    = $$qunkref{'revision'};
 | ||
|       my $tags        = $$qunkref{'tags'};
 | ||
|       my $branch      = $$qunkref{'branch'};
 | ||
|       my $branchroots = $$qunkref{'branchroots'};
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       $filename = &xml_escape ($filename);   # probably paranoia
 | ||
|       $revision = &xml_escape ($revision);   # definitely paranoia
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       $beauty .= "<file>\n";
 | ||
|       $beauty .= "<name>${filename}</name>\n";
 | ||
|       $beauty .= "<revision>${revision}</revision>\n";
 | ||
|       if ($branch) {
 | ||
|         $branch   = &xml_escape ($branch);     # more paranoia
 | ||
|         $beauty .= "<branch>${branch}</branch>\n";
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|       foreach my $tag (@$tags) {
 | ||
|         $tag = &xml_escape ($tag);  # by now you're used to the paranoia
 | ||
|         $beauty .= "<tag>${tag}</tag>\n";
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|       foreach my $root (@$branchroots) {
 | ||
|         $root = &xml_escape ($root);  # which is good, because it will continue
 | ||
|         $beauty .= "<branchroot>${root}</branchroot>\n";
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|       $beauty .= "</file>\n";
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     # Theoretically, we could go home now.  But as long as we're here,
 | ||
|     # let's print out the common_dir and utags, as a convenience to
 | ||
|     # the receiver (after all, earlier code calculated that stuff
 | ||
|     # anyway, so we might as well take advantage of it).
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     if ((scalar (keys (%unanimous_tags))) > 1) {
 | ||
|       foreach my $utag ((keys (%unanimous_tags))) {
 | ||
|         $utag = &xml_escape ($utag);   # the usual paranoia
 | ||
|         $beauty .= "<utag>${utag}</utag>\n";
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     if ($common_dir) {
 | ||
|       $common_dir = &xml_escape ($common_dir);
 | ||
|       $beauty .= "<commondir>${common_dir}</commondir>\n";
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     # That's enough for XML, time to go home:
 | ||
|     return $beauty;
 | ||
|   }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   # Else not XML output, so complexly compactify for chordate
 | ||
|   # consumption.  At this point we have enough global information
 | ||
|   # about all the qunks to organize them non-redundantly for output.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   if ($common_dir) {
 | ||
|     # Note that $common_dir still has its trailing slash
 | ||
|     $beauty .= "$common_dir: ";
 | ||
|   }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   if ($Show_Branches)
 | ||
|   {
 | ||
|     # For trailing revision numbers.
 | ||
|     my @brevisions;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     foreach my $branch (keys (%all_branches))
 | ||
|     {
 | ||
|       foreach my $qunkref (@qunkrefs)
 | ||
|       {
 | ||
|         if ((defined ($$qunkref{'branch'}))
 | ||
|             and ($$qunkref{'branch'} eq $branch))
 | ||
|         {
 | ||
|           if ($fbegun) {
 | ||
|             # kff todo: comma-delimited in XML too?  Sure.
 | ||
|             $beauty .= ", ";
 | ||
|           } 
 | ||
|           else {
 | ||
|             $fbegun = 1;
 | ||
|           }
 | ||
|           my $fname = substr ($$qunkref{'filename'}, length ($common_dir));
 | ||
|           $beauty .= $fname;
 | ||
|           $$qunkref{'printed'} = 1;  # Just setting a mark bit, basically
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|           if ($Show_Tags && (defined @{$$qunkref{'tags'}})) {
 | ||
|             my @tags = grep ($non_unanimous_tags{$_}, @{$$qunkref{'tags'}});
 | ||
|             if (@tags) {
 | ||
|               $beauty .= " (tags: ";
 | ||
|               $beauty .= join (', ', @tags);
 | ||
|               $beauty .= ")";
 | ||
|             }
 | ||
|           }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|           if ($Show_Revisions) {
 | ||
|             # Collect the revision numbers' last components, but don't
 | ||
|             # print them -- they'll get printed with the branch name
 | ||
|             # later.
 | ||
|             $$qunkref{'revision'} =~ /.+\.([\d]+)$/;
 | ||
|             push (@brevisions, $1);
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|             # todo: we're still collecting branch roots, but we're not
 | ||
|             # showing them anywhere.  If we do show them, it would be
 | ||
|             # nifty to just call them revision "0" on a the branch.
 | ||
|             # Yeah, that's the ticket.
 | ||
|           }
 | ||
|         }
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|       $beauty .= " ($branch";
 | ||
|       if (@brevisions) {
 | ||
|         if ((scalar (@brevisions)) > 1) {
 | ||
|           $beauty .= ".[";
 | ||
|           $beauty .= (join (',', @brevisions));
 | ||
|           $beauty .= "]";
 | ||
|         }
 | ||
|         else {
 | ||
|           $beauty .= ".$brevisions[0]";
 | ||
|         }
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|       $beauty .= ")";
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|   }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   # Okay; any qunks that were done according to branch are taken care
 | ||
|   # of, and marked as printed.  Now print everyone else.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   foreach my $qunkref (@qunkrefs)
 | ||
|   {
 | ||
|     next if (defined ($$qunkref{'printed'}));   # skip if already printed
 | ||
|         
 | ||
|     if ($fbegun) {
 | ||
|       $beauty .= ", ";
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     else {
 | ||
|       $fbegun = 1;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     $beauty .= substr ($$qunkref{'filename'}, length ($common_dir));
 | ||
|     # todo: Shlomo's change was this:
 | ||
|     # $beauty .= substr ($$qunkref{'filename'}, 
 | ||
|     #              (($common_dir eq "./") ? "" : length ($common_dir)));
 | ||
|     $$qunkref{'printed'} = 1;  # Set a mark bit.
 | ||
|     
 | ||
|     if ($Show_Revisions || $Show_Tags)
 | ||
|     {
 | ||
|       my $started_addendum = 0;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       if ($Show_Revisions) {
 | ||
|         $started_addendum = 1;
 | ||
|         $beauty .= " (";
 | ||
|         $beauty .= "$$qunkref{'revision'}";
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|       if ($Show_Tags && (defined $$qunkref{'tags'})) {
 | ||
|         my @tags = grep ($non_unanimous_tags{$_}, @{$$qunkref{'tags'}});
 | ||
|         if ((scalar (@tags)) > 0) {
 | ||
|           if ($started_addendum) {
 | ||
|             $beauty .= ", ";
 | ||
|           }
 | ||
|           else {
 | ||
|             $beauty .= " (tags: ";
 | ||
|           }
 | ||
|           $beauty .= join (', ', @tags);
 | ||
|           $started_addendum = 1;
 | ||
|         }
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|       if ($started_addendum) {
 | ||
|         $beauty .= ")";
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|   }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   # Unanimous tags always come last.
 | ||
|   if ($Show_Tags && %unanimous_tags)
 | ||
|   {
 | ||
|     $beauty .= " (utags: ";
 | ||
|     $beauty .= join (', ', keys (%unanimous_tags));
 | ||
|     $beauty .= ")";
 | ||
|   }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   # todo: still have to take care of branch_roots?
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   $beauty = "* $beauty:";
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   return $beauty;
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| sub common_path_prefix ()
 | ||
| {
 | ||
|   my $path1 = shift;
 | ||
|   my $path2 = shift;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   my ($dir1, $dir2);
 | ||
|   (undef, $dir1, undef) = fileparse ($path1);
 | ||
|   (undef, $dir2, undef) = fileparse ($path2);
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   # Transmogrify Windows filenames to look like Unix.  
 | ||
|   # (It is far more likely that someone is running cvs2cl.pl under
 | ||
|   # Windows than that they would genuinely have backslashes in their
 | ||
|   # filenames.)
 | ||
|   $dir1 =~ tr#\\#/#;
 | ||
|   $dir2 =~ tr#\\#/#;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   my $accum1 = "";
 | ||
|   my $accum2 = "";
 | ||
|   my $last_common_prefix = "";
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   while ($accum1 eq $accum2)
 | ||
|   {
 | ||
|     $last_common_prefix = $accum1;
 | ||
|     last if ($accum1 eq $dir1);
 | ||
|     my ($tmp1) = split (/\//, (substr ($dir1, length ($accum1))));
 | ||
|     my ($tmp2) = split (/\//, (substr ($dir2, length ($accum2))));
 | ||
|     $accum1 .= "$tmp1/" if ((defined ($tmp1)) and $tmp1);
 | ||
|     $accum2 .= "$tmp2/" if ((defined ($tmp2)) and $tmp2);
 | ||
|   }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   return $last_common_prefix;
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| sub preprocess_msg_text ()
 | ||
| {
 | ||
|   my $text = shift;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   # Strip out carriage returns (as they probably result from DOSsy editors).
 | ||
|   $text =~ s/\r\n/\n/g;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   # If it *looks* like two newlines, make it *be* two newlines:
 | ||
|   $text =~ s/\n\s*\n/\n\n/g;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   if ($XML_Output)
 | ||
|   {
 | ||
|     $text = &xml_escape ($text);
 | ||
|     $text = "<msg>${text}</msg>\n";
 | ||
|   }
 | ||
|   elsif (! $No_Wrap)
 | ||
|   {
 | ||
|     # Strip off lone newlines, but only for lines that don't begin with
 | ||
|     # whitespace or a mail-quoting character, since we want to preserve
 | ||
|     # that kind of formatting.  Also don't strip newlines that follow a
 | ||
|     # period; we handle those specially next.  And don't strip
 | ||
|     # newlines that precede an open paren.
 | ||
|     1 while ($text =~ s/(^|\n)([^>\s].*[^.\n])\n([^>\n])/$1$2 $3/g);
 | ||
|     
 | ||
|     # If a newline follows a period, make sure that when we bring up the
 | ||
|     # bottom sentence, it begins with two spaces. 
 | ||
|     1 while ($text =~ s/(^|\n)([^>\s].*)\n([^>\n])/$1$2  $3/g);
 | ||
|   }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   return $text;
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| sub last_line_len ()
 | ||
| {
 | ||
|   my $files_list = shift;
 | ||
|   my @lines = split (/\n/, $files_list);
 | ||
|   my $last_line = pop (@lines);
 | ||
|   return length ($last_line);
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| # A custom wrap function, sensitive to some common constructs used in
 | ||
| # log entries.
 | ||
| sub wrap_log_entry ()
 | ||
| {
 | ||
|   my $text = shift;                  # The text to wrap.
 | ||
|   my $left_pad_str = shift;          # String to pad with on the left.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   # These do NOT take left_pad_str into account:
 | ||
|   my $length_remaining = shift;      # Amount left on current line.
 | ||
|   my $max_line_length  = shift;      # Amount left for a blank line.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   my $wrapped_text = "";             # The accumulating wrapped entry.
 | ||
|   my $user_indent = "";              # Inherited user_indent from prev line.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   my $first_time = 1;                # First iteration of the loop?
 | ||
|   my $suppress_line_start_match = 0; # Set to disable line start checks.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   my @lines = split (/\n/, $text);
 | ||
|   while (@lines)   # Don't use `foreach' here, it won't work.
 | ||
|   {
 | ||
|     my $this_line = shift (@lines);
 | ||
|     chomp $this_line;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     if ($this_line =~ /^(\s+)/) {
 | ||
|       $user_indent = $1;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     else {
 | ||
|       $user_indent = "";
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     # If it matches any of the line-start regexps, print a newline now...
 | ||
|     if ($suppress_line_start_match)
 | ||
|     {
 | ||
|       $suppress_line_start_match = 0;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     elsif (($this_line =~ /^(\s*)\*\s+[a-zA-Z0-9]/)
 | ||
|            || ($this_line =~ /^(\s*)\* [a-zA-Z0-9_\.\/\+-]+/)
 | ||
|            || ($this_line =~ /^(\s*)\([a-zA-Z0-9_\.\/\+-]+(\)|,\s*)/)
 | ||
|            || ($this_line =~ /^(\s+)(\S+)/)
 | ||
|            || ($this_line =~ /^(\s*)- +/)
 | ||
|            || ($this_line =~ /^()\s*$/)
 | ||
|            || ($this_line =~ /^(\s*)\*\) +/)
 | ||
|            || ($this_line =~ /^(\s*)[a-zA-Z0-9](\)|\.|\:) +/))
 | ||
|     {
 | ||
|       # Make a line break immediately, unless header separator is set
 | ||
|       # and this line is the first line in the entry, in which case
 | ||
|       # we're getting the blank line for free already and shouldn't
 | ||
|       # add an extra one.
 | ||
|       unless (($After_Header ne " ") and ($first_time))
 | ||
|       {
 | ||
|         if ($this_line =~ /^()\s*$/) {
 | ||
|           $suppress_line_start_match = 1;
 | ||
|           $wrapped_text .= "\n${left_pad_str}";
 | ||
|         }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|         $wrapped_text .= "\n${left_pad_str}";
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|       
 | ||
|       $length_remaining = $max_line_length - (length ($user_indent));
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     # Now that any user_indent has been preserved, strip off leading
 | ||
|     # whitespace, so up-folding has no ugly side-effects.
 | ||
|     $this_line =~ s/^\s*//;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     # Accumulate the line, and adjust parameters for next line.
 | ||
|     my $this_len = length ($this_line);
 | ||
|     if ($this_len == 0)
 | ||
|     {
 | ||
|       # Blank lines should cancel any user_indent level.
 | ||
|       $user_indent = "";
 | ||
|       $length_remaining = $max_line_length;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     elsif ($this_len >= $length_remaining) # Line too long, try breaking it.
 | ||
|     {
 | ||
|       # Walk backwards from the end.  At first acceptable spot, break
 | ||
|       # a new line.
 | ||
|       my $idx = $length_remaining - 1;
 | ||
|       if ($idx < 0) { $idx = 0 };
 | ||
|       while ($idx > 0)
 | ||
|       {
 | ||
|         if (substr ($this_line, $idx, 1) =~ /\s/)
 | ||
|         {
 | ||
|           my $line_now = substr ($this_line, 0, $idx);
 | ||
|           my $next_line = substr ($this_line, $idx);
 | ||
|           $this_line = $line_now;
 | ||
|           
 | ||
|           # Clean whitespace off the end.
 | ||
|           chomp $this_line;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|           # The current line is ready to be printed.
 | ||
|           $this_line .= "\n${left_pad_str}";
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|           # Make sure the next line is allowed full room.
 | ||
|           $length_remaining = $max_line_length - (length ($user_indent));
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|           # Strip next_line, but then preserve any user_indent.
 | ||
|           $next_line =~ s/^\s*//;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|           # Sneak a peek at the user_indent of the upcoming line, so
 | ||
|           # $next_line (which will now precede it) can inherit that
 | ||
|           # indent level.  Otherwise, use whatever user_indent level
 | ||
|           # we currently have, which might be none.
 | ||
|           my $next_next_line = shift (@lines);
 | ||
|           if ((defined ($next_next_line)) && ($next_next_line =~ /^(\s+)/)) {
 | ||
|             $next_line = $1 . $next_line if (defined ($1));
 | ||
|             # $length_remaining = $max_line_length - (length ($1));
 | ||
|             $next_next_line =~ s/^\s*//;
 | ||
|           }
 | ||
|           else {
 | ||
|             $next_line = $user_indent . $next_line;
 | ||
|           }
 | ||
|           if (defined ($next_next_line)) {
 | ||
|             unshift (@lines, $next_next_line);
 | ||
|           }
 | ||
|           unshift (@lines, $next_line);
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|           # Our new next line might, coincidentally, begin with one of
 | ||
|           # the line-start regexps, so we temporarily turn off
 | ||
|           # sensitivity to that until we're past the line.
 | ||
|           $suppress_line_start_match = 1; 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|           last;
 | ||
|         }
 | ||
|         else
 | ||
|         {
 | ||
|           $idx--;
 | ||
|         }
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       if ($idx == 0)
 | ||
|       {
 | ||
|         # We bottomed out because the line is longer than the
 | ||
|         # available space.  But that could be because the space is
 | ||
|         # small, or because the line is longer than even the maximum
 | ||
|         # possible space.  Handle both cases below.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|         if ($length_remaining == ($max_line_length - (length ($user_indent))))
 | ||
|         {
 | ||
|           # The line is simply too long -- there is no hope of ever
 | ||
|           # breaking it nicely, so just insert it verbatim, with
 | ||
|           # appropriate padding.
 | ||
|           $this_line = "\n${left_pad_str}${this_line}";
 | ||
|         }
 | ||
|         else
 | ||
|         {
 | ||
|           # Can't break it here, but may be able to on the next round...
 | ||
|           unshift (@lines, $this_line);
 | ||
|           $length_remaining = $max_line_length - (length ($user_indent));
 | ||
|           $this_line = "\n${left_pad_str}";
 | ||
|         }
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     else  # $this_len < $length_remaining, so tack on what we can.
 | ||
|     {
 | ||
|       # Leave a note for the next iteration.
 | ||
|       $length_remaining = $length_remaining - $this_len;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       if ($this_line =~ /\.$/)
 | ||
|       {
 | ||
|         $this_line .= "  ";
 | ||
|         $length_remaining -= 2;
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|       else  # not a sentence end
 | ||
|       {
 | ||
|         $this_line .= " ";
 | ||
|         $length_remaining -= 1;
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     # Unconditionally indicate that loop has run at least once.
 | ||
|     $first_time = 0;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     $wrapped_text .= "${user_indent}${this_line}";
 | ||
|   }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   # One last bit of padding.
 | ||
|   $wrapped_text .= "\n";
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   return $wrapped_text;
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| sub xml_escape ()
 | ||
| {
 | ||
|   my $txt = shift;
 | ||
|   $txt =~ s/&/&/g;
 | ||
|   $txt =~ s/</</g;
 | ||
|   $txt =~ s/>/>/g;
 | ||
|   return $txt;
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| sub maybe_read_user_map_file ()
 | ||
| {
 | ||
|   my %expansions;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   if ($User_Map_File)
 | ||
|   {
 | ||
|     open (MAPFILE, "<$User_Map_File")
 | ||
|         or die ("Unable to open $User_Map_File ($!)");
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     while (<MAPFILE>) 
 | ||
|     {
 | ||
|       next if /^\s*#/;  # Skip comment lines.
 | ||
|       next if not /:/;  # Skip lines without colons.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       # It is now safe to split on ':'.
 | ||
|       my ($username, $expansion) = split ':';
 | ||
|       chomp $expansion;
 | ||
|       $expansion =~ s/^'(.*)'$/$1/;
 | ||
|       $expansion =~ s/^"(.*)"$/$1/;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       # If it looks like the expansion has a real name already, then
 | ||
|       # we toss the username we got from CVS log.  Otherwise, keep
 | ||
|       # it to use in combination with the email address.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       if ($expansion =~ /^\s*<{0,1}\S+@.*/) {
 | ||
|         # Also, add angle brackets if none present
 | ||
|         if (! ($expansion =~ /<\S+@\S+>/)) {
 | ||
|           $expansions{$username} = "$username <$expansion>";
 | ||
|         }
 | ||
|         else {
 | ||
|           $expansions{$username} = "$username $expansion";
 | ||
|         }
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|       else {
 | ||
|         $expansions{$username} = $expansion;
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     close (MAPFILE);
 | ||
|   }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   return %expansions;
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| sub parse_options ()
 | ||
| {
 | ||
|   # Check this internally before setting the global variable.
 | ||
|   my $output_file;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   # If this gets set, we encountered unknown options and will exit at
 | ||
|   # the end of this subroutine.
 | ||
|   my $exit_with_admonishment = 0;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   while (my $arg = shift (@ARGV)) 
 | ||
|   {
 | ||
|     if ($arg =~ /^-h$|^-help$|^--help$|^--usage$|^-?$/) {
 | ||
|       $Print_Usage = 1;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     elsif ($arg =~ /^--debug$/) {        # unadvertised option, heh
 | ||
|       $Debug = 1;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     elsif ($arg =~ /^--version$/) {
 | ||
|       $Print_Version = 1;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     elsif ($arg =~ /^-g$|^--global-opts$/) {
 | ||
|       my $narg = shift (@ARGV) || die "$arg needs argument.\n";
 | ||
|       # Don't assume CVS is called "cvs" on the user's system:
 | ||
|       $Log_Source_Command =~ s/(^\S*)/$1 $narg/;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     elsif ($arg =~ /^-l$|^--log-opts$/) {
 | ||
|       my $narg = shift (@ARGV) || die "$arg needs argument.\n";
 | ||
|       $Log_Source_Command .= " $narg";
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     elsif ($arg =~ /^-f$|^--file$/) {
 | ||
|       my $narg = shift (@ARGV) || die "$arg needs argument.\n";
 | ||
|       $output_file = $narg;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     elsif ($arg =~ /^--fsf$/) {
 | ||
|       $FSF_Style = 1;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     elsif ($arg =~ /^-U$|^--usermap$/) {
 | ||
|       my $narg = shift (@ARGV) || die "$arg needs argument.\n";
 | ||
|       $User_Map_File = $narg;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     elsif ($arg =~ /^-W$|^--window$/) {
 | ||
|       my $narg = shift (@ARGV) || die "$arg needs argument.\n";
 | ||
|       $Max_Checkin_Duration = $narg;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     elsif ($arg =~ /^-I$|^--ignore$/) {
 | ||
|       my $narg = shift (@ARGV) || die "$arg needs argument.\n";
 | ||
|       push (@Ignore_Files, $narg);
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     elsif ($arg =~ /^-C$|^--case-insensitive$/) {
 | ||
|       $Case_Insensitive = 1;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     elsif ($arg =~ /^-R$|^--regexp$/) {
 | ||
|       my $narg = shift (@ARGV) || die "$arg needs argument.\n";
 | ||
|       $Regexp_Gate = $narg;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     elsif ($arg =~ /^--stdout$/) {
 | ||
|       $Output_To_Stdout = 1;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     elsif ($arg =~ /^--version$/) {
 | ||
|       $Print_Version = 1;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     elsif ($arg =~ /^-d$|^--distributed$/) {
 | ||
|       $Distributed = 1;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     elsif ($arg =~ /^-P$|^--prune$/) {
 | ||
|       $Prune_Empty_Msgs = 1;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     elsif ($arg =~ /^-S$|^--separate-header$/) {
 | ||
|       $After_Header = "\n\n";
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     elsif ($arg =~ /^--no-wrap$/) {
 | ||
|       $No_Wrap = 1;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     elsif ($arg =~ /^--gmt$|^--utc$/) {
 | ||
|       $UTC_Times = 1;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     elsif ($arg =~ /^-w$|^--day-of-week$/) {
 | ||
|       $Show_Day_Of_Week = 1;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     elsif ($arg =~ /^-r$|^--revisions$/) {
 | ||
|       $Show_Revisions = 1;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     elsif ($arg =~ /^-t$|^--tags$/) {
 | ||
|       $Show_Tags = 1;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     elsif ($arg =~ /^-b$|^--branches$/) {
 | ||
|       $Show_Branches = 1;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     elsif ($arg =~ /^-F$|^--follow$/) {
 | ||
|       my $narg = shift (@ARGV) || die "$arg needs argument.\n";
 | ||
|       push (@Follow_Branches, $narg);
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     elsif ($arg =~ /^--stdin$/) {
 | ||
|       $Input_From_Stdin = 1;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     elsif ($arg =~ /^--header$/) {
 | ||
|       my $narg = shift (@ARGV) || die "$arg needs argument.\n";
 | ||
|       $ChangeLog_Header = &slurp_file ($narg);
 | ||
|       if (! defined ($ChangeLog_Header)) {
 | ||
|         $ChangeLog_Header = "";
 | ||
|       }
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     elsif ($arg =~ /^--xml$/) {
 | ||
|       $XML_Output = 1;
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     elsif ($arg =~ /^--hide-filenames$/) {
 | ||
|       $Hide_Filenames = 1;
 | ||
|       $After_Header = "";
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     else {
 | ||
|       # Just add a filename as argument to the log command
 | ||
|       $Log_Source_Command .= " $arg";
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|   }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   ## Check for contradictions...
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   if ($Output_To_Stdout && $Distributed) {
 | ||
|     print STDERR "cannot pass both --stdout and --distributed\n";
 | ||
|     $exit_with_admonishment = 1;
 | ||
|   }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   if ($Output_To_Stdout && $output_file) {
 | ||
|     print STDERR "cannot pass both --stdout and --file\n";
 | ||
|     $exit_with_admonishment = 1;
 | ||
|   }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   # Or if any other error message has already been printed out, we
 | ||
|   # just leave now:
 | ||
|   if ($exit_with_admonishment) {
 | ||
|     &usage ();
 | ||
|     exit (1);
 | ||
|   }
 | ||
|   elsif ($Print_Usage) {
 | ||
|     &usage ();
 | ||
|     exit (0);
 | ||
|   }
 | ||
|   elsif ($Print_Version) {
 | ||
|     &version ();
 | ||
|     exit (0);
 | ||
|   }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   ## Else no problems, so proceed.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   if ($Output_To_Stdout) {
 | ||
|     undef $Log_File_Name;       # not actually necessary
 | ||
|   }
 | ||
|   elsif ($output_file) {
 | ||
|     $Log_File_Name = $output_file;
 | ||
|   }
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| sub slurp_file ()
 | ||
| {
 | ||
|   my $filename = shift || die ("no filename passed to slurp_file()");
 | ||
|   my $retstr;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   open (SLURPEE, "<${filename}") or die ("unable to open $filename ($!)");
 | ||
|   my $saved_sep = $/;
 | ||
|   undef $/;
 | ||
|   $retstr = <SLURPEE>;
 | ||
|   $/ = $saved_sep;
 | ||
|   close (SLURPEE);
 | ||
|   return $retstr;
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| sub debug ()
 | ||
| {
 | ||
|   if ($Debug) {
 | ||
|     my $msg = shift;
 | ||
|     print STDERR $msg;
 | ||
|   }
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| sub version ()
 | ||
| {
 | ||
|   print "cvs2cl.pl version ${VERSION}; distributed under the GNU GPL.\n";
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| sub usage ()
 | ||
| {
 | ||
|   &version ();
 | ||
|   print <<'END_OF_INFO';
 | ||
| Generate GNU-style ChangeLogs in CVS working copies.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Notes about the output format(s):
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    The default output of cvs2cl.pl is designed to be compact, formally
 | ||
|    unambiguous, but still easy for humans to read.  It is largely
 | ||
|    self-explanatory, I hope; the one abbreviation that might not be
 | ||
|    obvious is "utags".  That stands for "universal tags" -- a
 | ||
|    universal tag is one held by all the files in a given change entry.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    If you need output that's easy for a program to parse, use the
 | ||
|    --xml option.  Note that with XML output, just about all available
 | ||
|    information is included with each change entry, whether you asked
 | ||
|    for it or not, on the theory that your parser can ignore anything
 | ||
|    it's not looking for.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Notes about the options and arguments (the actual options are listed
 | ||
| last in this usage message):
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   * The -I and -F options may appear multiple times.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   * To follow trunk revisions, use "-F trunk" ("-F TRUNK" also works).
 | ||
|     This is okay because no would ever, ever be crazy enough to name a
 | ||
|     branch "trunk", right?  Right.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   * For the -U option, the UFILE should be formatted like
 | ||
|     CVSROOT/users. That is, each line of UFILE looks like this
 | ||
|        jrandom:jrandom@red-bean.com
 | ||
|     or maybe even like this
 | ||
|        jrandom:'Jesse Q. Random <jrandom@red-bean.com>'
 | ||
|     Don't forget to quote the portion after the colon if necessary.
 | ||
|   
 | ||
|   * Many people want to filter by date.  To do so, invoke cvs2cl.pl
 | ||
|     like this: 
 | ||
|        cvs2cl.pl -l "-d'DATESPEC'"
 | ||
|     where DATESPEC is any date specification valid for "cvs log -d".
 | ||
|     (Note that CVS 1.10.7 and below requires there be no space between
 | ||
|     -d and its argument).
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Options/Arguments:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   -h, -help, --help, or -?     Show this usage and exit
 | ||
|   --version                    Show version and exit
 | ||
|   -r, --revisions              Show revision numbers in output
 | ||
|   -b, --branches               Show branch names in revisions when possible
 | ||
|   -t, --tags                   Show tags (symbolic names) in output
 | ||
|   --stdin                      Read from stdin, don't run cvs log
 | ||
|   --stdout                     Output to stdout not to ChangeLog
 | ||
|   -d, --distributed            Put ChangeLogs in subdirs
 | ||
|   -f FILE, --file FILE         Write to FILE instead of "ChangeLog"
 | ||
|   --fsf                        Use this if log data is in FSF ChangeLog style
 | ||
|   -W SECS, --window SECS       Window of time within which log entries unify
 | ||
|   -U UFILE, --usermap UFILE    Expand usernames to email addresses from UFILE
 | ||
|   -R REGEXP, --regexp REGEXP   Include only entries that match REGEXP
 | ||
|   -I REGEXP, --ignore REGEXP   Ignore files whose names match REGEXP
 | ||
|   -C, --case-insensitive       Any regexp matching is done case-insensitively
 | ||
|   -F BRANCH, --follow BRANCH   Show only revisions on or ancestral to BRANCH
 | ||
|   -S, --separate-header        Blank line between each header and log message
 | ||
|   --no-wrap                    Don't auto-wrap log message (recommend -S also)
 | ||
|   --gmt, --utc                 Show times in GMT/UTC instead of local time
 | ||
|   -w, --day-of-week            Show day of week
 | ||
|   --header FILE                Get ChangeLog header from FILE ("-" means stdin)
 | ||
|   --xml                        Output XML instead of ChangeLog format
 | ||
|   --hide-filenames             Don't show filenames (ignored for XML output)
 | ||
|   -P, --prune                  Don't show empty log messages
 | ||
|   -g OPTS, --global-opts OPTS  Invoke like this "cvs OPTS log ..."
 | ||
|   -l OPTS, --log-opts OPTS     Invoke like this "cvs ... log OPTS"
 | ||
|   FILE1 [FILE2 ...]            Show only log information for the named FILE(s)
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| See http://www.red-bean.com/cvs2cl for maintenance and bug info.
 | ||
| END_OF_INFO
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| __END__
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| =head1 NAME
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| cvs2cl.pl - produces GNU-style ChangeLogs in CVS working copies, by
 | ||
|     running "cvs log" and parsing the output.  Shared log entries are
 | ||
|     unified in an intuitive way.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| =head1 DESCRIPTION
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| This script generates GNU-style ChangeLog files from CVS log
 | ||
| information.  Basic usage: just run it inside a working copy and a
 | ||
| ChangeLog will appear.  It requires repository access (i.e., 'cvs log'
 | ||
| must work).  Run "cvs2cl.pl --help" to see more advanced options.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| See http://www.red-bean.com/cvs2cl for updates, and for instructions
 | ||
| on getting anonymous CVS access to this script.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Maintainer: Karl Fogel <kfogel@red-bean.com>
 | ||
| Please report bugs to <bug-cvs2cl@red-bean.com>.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| =head1 README
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| This script generates GNU-style ChangeLog files from CVS log
 | ||
| information.  Basic usage: just run it inside a working copy and a
 | ||
| ChangeLog will appear.  It requires repository access (i.e., 'cvs log'
 | ||
| must work).  Run "cvs2cl.pl --help" to see more advanced options.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| See http://www.red-bean.com/cvs2cl for updates, and for instructions
 | ||
| on getting anonymous CVS access to this script.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Maintainer: Karl Fogel <kfogel@red-bean.com>
 | ||
| Please report bugs to <bug-cvs2cl@red-bean.com>.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| =head1 PREREQUISITES
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| This script requires C<Text::Wrap>, C<Time::Local>, and
 | ||
| C<File::Basename>.
 | ||
| It also seems to require C<Perl 5.004_04> or higher.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| =pod OSNAMES
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| any
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| =pod SCRIPT CATEGORIES
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Version_Control/CVS
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| =cut
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| -*- -*- -*- -*- -*- -*- -*- -*- -*- -*- -*- -*- -*- -*- -*- -*- -*- -*-
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Note about a bug-slash-opportunity:
 | ||
| -----------------------------------
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| There's a bug in Text::Wrap, which affects cvs2cl.  This script
 | ||
| reveals it:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   #!/usr/bin/perl -w
 | ||
|   
 | ||
|   use Text::Wrap;
 | ||
|   
 | ||
|   my $test_text =
 | ||
|   "This script demonstrates a bug in Text::Wrap.  The very long line
 | ||
|   following this paragraph will be relocated relative to the surrounding
 | ||
|   text:
 | ||
|   
 | ||
|   ====================================================================
 | ||
|   
 | ||
|   See?  When the bug happens, we'll get the line of equal signs below
 | ||
|   this paragraph, even though it should be above.";
 | ||
|   
 | ||
|   
 | ||
|   # Print out the test text with no wrapping:
 | ||
|   print "$test_text";
 | ||
|   print "\n";
 | ||
|   print "\n";
 | ||
|   
 | ||
|   # Now print it out wrapped, and see the bug:
 | ||
|   print wrap ("\t", "        ", "$test_text");
 | ||
|   print "\n";
 | ||
|   print "\n";
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| If the line of equal signs were one shorter, then the bug doesn't
 | ||
| happen.  Interesting.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Anyway, rather than fix this in Text::Wrap, we might as well write a
 | ||
| new wrap() which has the following much-needed features:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| * initial indentation, like current Text::Wrap()
 | ||
| * subsequent line indentation, like current Text::Wrap()
 | ||
| * user chooses among: force-break long words, leave them alone, or die()?
 | ||
| * preserve existing indentation: chopped chunks from an indented line
 | ||
|   are indented by same (like this line, not counting the asterisk!)
 | ||
| * optional list of things to preserve on line starts, default ">"
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Note that the last two are essentially the same concept, so unify in
 | ||
| implementation and give a good interface to controlling them.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| And how about:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Optionally, when encounter a line pre-indented by same as previous
 | ||
| line, then strip the newline and refill, but indent by the same.
 | ||
| Yeah...
 |