Jean-Pierre,
Jean-Pierre Sevigny wrote:
Hi,
I have a module, say "mymodule", defined like this:
mymodule -a Project/Web \
!Project/Web/Client1 \
!Project/Web/Client2
Your problem is that your alias module is defined incorrectly. It
should be:
mymodule -a Project/Web/Clientx Project/Web
With my test modules set like this:
mod_test1 -a !test1/test2 test1
mod_test2 -a test1 !test1/test2
two test 'cvs rtags' produce the output shown below. Note that the
first one does what you want; the second does what tags everything,
which isn't what you want.
sahp6613% cvs rtag test_tag1 mod_test1
cvs rtag: Tagging test1
cvs rtag: Ignoring test1/test2
sahp6613% cvs rtag test_tag2 mod_test2
cvs rtag: Tagging test1
cvs rtag: Tagging test1/test2
cvs rtag: Tagging test1/test2/rtest
cvs rtag: Tagging test1/test2/rtest/null
cvs rtag: Tagging test1/test2/rtest/null/a