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Perforce 2009.1: Command Reference



File Specifications
Synopsis
Any file can be specified within any Perforce command in client syntax, depot syntax, or local syntax. Client workspace names and depot names share the same namespace; there is no way for the Perforce server to confuse a client name with a depot name.
Syntax forms
Local syntax refers to filenames as specified by the local shell or operating system. Filenames referred to in local syntax may be specified by their absolute paths or relative to the current working directory. (Relative path components may only appear at the beginning of a file specifier.)
Perforce has its own method of file specification which remains unchanged across operating systems. If a file is specified relative to a client root, it is said to be in client syntax. If it is specified relative to the top of the depot, it is said to be in depot syntax. A file specified in either manner can be said to have been specified in Perforce syntax.
Perforce file specifiers always begin with two slashes (//), followed by the client or depot name, followed by the full pathname of the file relative to the client or depot root directory.
Path components in client and depot syntax are always separated by slashes (/), regardless of the component separator used by the local operating system or shell.
An example of each syntax is provided below
Wildcards
The Perforce system allows the use of three wildcards:
Matches all files under the current working directory and all subdirectories. (matches anything, including slashes, and does so across subdirectories)
For example:
All files called help in current subdirectories
Using revision specifiers
File specifiers may be modified by appending # or @ to them.
The # and @ specifiers refer to specific revisions of files as stored in the depot:
Revision specifier: The nth revision of file.
file#none
The nonexistent revision: If a revision of file exists in the depot, it is ignored.
This is useful when you want to remove a file from the client workspace while leaving it intact in the depot, as in p4 sync file#none.
The filespec #0 may be used as a synonym for #none - the nonexistent revision can be thought of as the one that "existed" before the first revision was submitted to the depot.
file#head
The head revision (latest version) of file. Except where explicitly noted, this is equivalent to referring to the file without a revision specifier.
file#have
Change number: The revision of file immediately after changelist n was submitted.
file@labelname
Label name: The revision of file in the label labelname.
file@clientname
Client name: The revision of file last taken into client workspace clientname.
file@datespec
Date and time: The revision of file at the date and time specified.
If no time is specified, the head revision at 00:00:00 on the morning of the date specified is returned.
Dates are specified yyyy/mm/dd:hh:mm:ss or yyyy/mm/dd hh:mm:ss (with either a space or a colon between the date and the time).
The datespec @now may be used as a synonym for the current date and time.
Revision specifiers can be used to operate on many files at once: p4 sync //myclient/...#4 copies the fourth revision of all non-open files into the client workspace.
If specifying files by date and time (i.e., using specifiers of the form file@datespec), the date specification should be parsed by your local shell as a single token. You may need to use quotation marks around the date specification if you use it to specify a time as well as a date.
Some Perforce file specification characters may be intercepted and interpreted by the local shell, and need to be escaped before use. For instance, # is used as the comment character in most UNIX shells, and / may be interpreted by (non-Perforce) DOS commands as an option specifier. File names with spaces in them may have to be quoted on the command line.
For information on these and other platform-specific issues, see the release notes for your platform.
Using revision ranges
A few Perforce commands can use revision ranges to modify file arguments. Revision ranges are two separate revision specifications, separated by a comma. For example, p4 changes file#3,5 lists the changelists that submitted file file at its third, fourth, and fifth revisions.
Revision ranges have two separate meanings, depending on which command you're using. The two meanings are:
Run the command on all revisions in the specified range. For example, p4 jobs //...#20,52 lists all jobs fixed by any changelist that submitted any file at its 20th through 52nd revision.
This interpretation of revision ranges applies to p4 changes, p4 fixes, p4 integrate, p4 jobs, and p4 verify.
Run the command on only the highest revision in the specified range. For example, the command p4 print file@30,50 prints the highest revision of file file submitted between changelists 30 and 50. This is different than p4 print file@50: if revision 1 of file file was submitted in changelist 20, and revision 2 of file file was submitted in changelist 60, then p4 print file@30,50 prints nothing, while p4 print file@50 prints revision 1 of file.
The commands p4 files, p4 print, and p4 sync all use revision ranges in this fashion.
Revision ranges can be very powerful. For example, the command p4 changes file#3,@labelname lists all changelists that submitted file file between its third revision and the revision stored in label labelname.
Limitations on characters in filenames and entities
To support internationalization, Perforce permits the use of "unprintable" (non-ASCII) characters in filenames, label names, client workspace names, and other identifiers.
The pathname component separator (/) is not permitted in filenames, depot names, or client workspace names, but may appear in label names, job names, or user names. The recursive subdirectory wildcard (...) is not permitted in file names, label names, or other identifiers.
Perforce wildcard: matches anything, works at the current directory level and includes files in all directory levels below the current level.
To refer to files containing the Perforce revision specifier wildcards (@ and #), file matching wildcard (*), or positional substitution wildcard (%%) in either the file name or any directory component, use the ASCII expression of the character's hexadecimal value. ASCII expansion applies only to the following four characters:
ASCII expansion
To add a file such as [email protected], force a literal interpretation of special characters by using:
p4 add -f //depot/path/[email protected]
When you submit the changelist, the characters are automatically expanded and appear in the change submission form as follows:
//depot/path/status%40june.txt
After submitting the changelist with the file's addition, you must use the ASCII expansion in order to sync it to your workspace or edit it within your workspace:
p4 sync //depot/path/status%40june.txt
p4 edit //depot/path/status%40june.txt
Most special characters tend to be difficult to use in filenames in cross-platform environments: UNIX separates path components with /, while many DOS commands interpret / as a command line switch. Most UNIX shells interpret # as the beginning of a comment. Both DOS and UNIX shells automatically expand * to match multiple files, and the DOS command line uses % to refer to variables.
Similarly, although non-ASCII characters are allowed in filenames and Perforce identifiers, entering these characters from the command line may require platform-specific solutions. Users of GUI-based file managers can manipulate such files with drag-and-drop operations.


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Perforce 2009.1: Command Reference
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