In the code:
* general plugin API calls (in plugins/write order),
* VCS plugin API calls (in plugins/write order), then
* internal support routines (in alphabetical order).
In the tests:
* general meta-behavior (in no particular order, yet),
* general plugin API calls (in plugins/write order),
* VCS plugin API calls (in plugins/write order), then
* internal support routines (in semi-logical order).
There was some confusion about whether the filename was
relative to srcdir or not. Some test cases, and the bzr
plugin assumed it was relative to the srcdir. Most everything else
assumed it was absolute.
Changed it to relative, for consistency with the rest
of the rcs_ functions.
Using named parameters for these is overdue. Passing the session in a
parameter instead of passing username and IP separately will later allow
storing other session info, like username or part of the email.
Note that these functions are not part of the exported API,
and the prototype change will catch (most) skew, so I am not changing
API versions. Any third-party plugins that call them will need updated
though.
* Rename --getctime to --gettime. (The old name still works for
backwards compatability.)
* --gettime now also looks up last modification time.
* Add rcs_getmtime to plugin API; currently only implemented
for git.
calls are warranted. They shouldn't modify the caller's working directory,
though. Use File::chdir to keep the scope of the changes subroutine-local.
The tests now pass without resetting the working directory.
* In Wrapper.pm, add a new hook "wrapperargcheck" to examine argc/argv
and return success or failure. In the failure case, the wrapper
terminates.
* In cvs.pm, implement the new hook to return failure if a directory is
being cvs added.
having to quote, and the possible use of the shell) sucks. Stop
passing args to cvs_runcvs() as an arrayref, since that also sucks
(and was a sop to IPC::Cmd). Instead, use Joey's construction for
temporarily redirecting stderr to /dev/null. Much much simpler and
better. Works on my laptop with bozohttpd, now to test on the NetBSD
wiki.