Revision Control System
Revision Control System (RCS) is an early implementation of a version control system (VCS). It is a set of UNIX commands that allow multiple users to develop and maintain program code or documents. With RCS, users can make their own revisions of a document, commit changes, and merge them. RCS was originally developed for programs but is also useful for text documents or configuration files that are frequently revised.
History
Development
RCS was first released in 1982 by Walter F. Tichy at Purdue University. It was an alternative tool to the then-popular Source Code Control System (SCCS) which was nearly the first version control software tool (developed in 1972 by early Unix developers). RCS is currently maintained by the GNU Project.
An innovation in RCS is the adoption of reverse deltas. Instead of storing every revision in a file like SCCS does with interleaved deltas, RCS stores a set of edit instructions to go back to an earlier version of the file. Tichy claims that it is faster for most cases because the recent revisions are used more often.
Legal and licensing
Initially (through version 3, which was distributed in 4.3BSD), its license prohibited redistribution without written permission from Walter Tichy:
A READ_ME file accompanied some versions of RCS which further restricted distribution, e.g., in 4.3BSD-Reno.
Ca. 1989, the RCS license was altered to something similar to the contemporary BSD licenses, as seen by comments in the source code.
RCS 4.3, released 26 July 1990, was distributed "under license by the Free Software Foundation", under the terms of the GPL.[full citation needed]
OpenBSD provides a different implementation called OpenRCS, which is BSD-licensed.
Behavior
Mode of operation
RCS works well with standalone files and supports multi-file projects but, by modern standards, that support is limited: RCS can assemble the versions of multiple files into a single release (via "symbolic names") but it lacks support for atomic commit across those files. Although it provides branching, the version syntax is cumbersome. Instead of using branches, many teams just use the built-in locking mechanism and work on a single head branch.
Usage
RCS revolves around the usage of "revision groups" or sets of files that have been checked-in via the co
(checkout) and ci
(check-in) commands. By default, a checked-in file is removed and replaced with a ",v" file (so foo.rb when checked in becomes foo.rb,v) which can then be checked out by anyone with access to the revision group. RCS files (again, files with the extension ",v") reflect the main file with additional metadata on its first lines. Once checked in, RCS stores revisions in a tree structure that can be followed so that a user can revert a file to a previous form if necessary.
Advantages
- Simple structure and easy to work with
- Revision saving is not dependent on a central repository
Disadvantages
- There is little security, in the sense that the version history can be edited by the users.
- Only one user can work on a file at a time.
Notes
See also
- Concurrent Versions System (CVS)
- Apache Subversion (SVN)
References
Notes
Further reading
- Don Bolinger, Tan Bronson, Applying RCS and SCCS - From Source Control to Project Control. O'Reilly, 1995.
- Walter F. Tichy, RCS—A System for Version Control, 1985
- Paul Heinlein, RCS HOWTO, 2004
External links
- Official website
- Original RCS at Purdue
- OpenBSD General Commands Manual : RCS file management program –