Good morning,
A couple of weeks ago I was asking about how to get cvs update to overwrite files it thinks were changed on this end (but either were not or were done by accident <grin>). You mentioned using the -C option on the command line. I added that, and double checked the man page. That sure sounds like what I want.
However, I am still seeing messages like the one here:
cvs update: move away `exec/load/key_defs.js'; it is in the way
C exec/load/key_defs.js
I am assuming that the first message is now only a warning and the second one tells me it really did overwrite the file. Is that correct? The reason I ask is that the date and time stamp is the same in my exec backup tarball for this file as it is in /sbbs/exec after running the update (sept 23). Makes me wonder
if it is really overwriting the files like I expect it to.
That means the file is on disk, but it wasn't put there via CVS to begin with (
aybe extracted from a zip or tgz file instead?).
No, you'll need to delete the file. If you have custom changes in your exec or >xec/load directory, probably best to just rename that directory and get a fresh
copy via CVS. Then in the future a "cvs update" should be no problem should wan
to perform one.
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