(cvs.info.gz) Specifying a repository
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2.1 Telling CVS where your repository is
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There are several ways to tell CVS where to find the repository. You
can name the repository on the command line explicitly, with the `-d'
(for "directory") option:
cvs -d /usr/local/cvsroot checkout yoyodyne/tc
Or you can set the `$CVSROOT' environment variable to an absolute
path to the root of the repository, `/usr/local/cvsroot' in this
example. To set `$CVSROOT', `csh' and `tcsh' users should have this
line in their `.cshrc' or `.tcshrc' files:
setenv CVSROOT /usr/local/cvsroot
`sh' and `bash' users should instead have these lines in their
`.profile' or `.bashrc':
CVSROOT=/usr/local/cvsroot
export CVSROOT
A repository specified with `-d' will override the `$CVSROOT'
environment variable. Once you've checked a working copy out from the
repository, it will remember where its repository is (the information
is recorded in the `CVS/Root' file in the working copy).
The `-d' option and the `CVS/Root' file both override the `$CVSROOT'
environment variable. If `-d' option differs from `CVS/Root', the
former is used. Of course, for proper operation they should be two
ways of referring to the same repository.
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