Fix comment to add the all-important trailing colon to the example.

Print the author with the revision date and filename.
This commit is contained in:
Guido van Rossum 1997-10-06 21:09:32 +00:00
parent dc1a072e02
commit 9971f689cb

View file

@ -4,10 +4,11 @@
Input should be the output of a CVS or RCS logging command, e.g.
cvs log -rrelease14
cvs log -rrelease14:
which dumps all log messages from release1.4 upwards (assuming that
release 1.4 was tagged with tag 'release14').
release 1.4 was tagged with tag 'release14'). Note the trailing
colon!
This collects all the revision records and outputs them sorted by date
rather than by file, collapsing duplicate revision record, i.e.,
@ -18,7 +19,8 @@ entry; this is useful when using something like the above cvs log
command, which shows the revisions including the given tag, while you
probably want everything *since* that tag.
XXX This code was created by reverse engineering CVS 1.9 and RCS 5.7.
XXX This code was created by reverse engineering CVS 1.9 and RCS 5.7
from their output.
"""
@ -88,12 +90,17 @@ def digest_chunk(chunk):
dateline = lines[1]
text = lines[2:]
words = string.split(dateline)
author = None
if len(words) >= 3 and words[0] == 'date:':
dateword = words[1]
timeword = words[2]
if timeword[-1:] == ';':
timeword = timeword[:-1]
date = dateword + ' ' + timeword
if len(words) >= 5 and words[3] == 'author:':
author = words[4]
if author[-1:] == ';':
author = author[:-1]
else:
date = None
text.insert(0, revline)
@ -103,22 +110,22 @@ def digest_chunk(chunk):
else:
rev = None
text.insert(0, revline)
records.append((date, working_file, rev, text))
records.append((date, working_file, rev, author, text))
return records
def format_output(database):
prevtext = None
prev = []
database.append((None, None, None, None)) # Sentinel
for (date, working_file, rev, text) in database:
database.append((None, None, None, None, None)) # Sentinel
for (date, working_file, rev, author, text) in database:
if text != prevtext:
if prev:
print sep2,
for (p_date, p_working_file, p_rev) in prev:
print p_date, p_working_file
for (p_date, p_working_file, p_rev, p_author) in prev:
print p_date, p_author, p_working_file
sys.stdout.writelines(prevtext)
prev = []
prev.append((date, working_file, rev))
prev.append((date, working_file, rev, author))
prevtext = text
main()