p4 unlock

Release the lock on a file.

Syntax

p4 [g-opts] unlock [-c change | -s shelvedchange | -x] [-f] [file ...]
p4 [g-opts] -c client unlock [-f ] -r
p4 [g-opts] -g -c change [-f ]

Description

The p4 unlock command includes three syntax variants:

By default, files can be unlocked only by the changelist owner who must also be the user who has the files locked. However, administrators may use the -f option to forcibly unlock a file opened by another user. For example, you can run a command like the following on the commit server.

$ p4 -c myclient unlock -xf myfile

An admin may also use this syntax to forcibly unlock files of type +1, which are not marked as orphaned, but which can no longer be unlocked by the user who opened them.

Options

-c changelist

Unlock files in pending changelist changelist. This option applies to opened files in a pending changelist that were locked by p4 lock or a failed submit operation of an unshelved changelist.

-f

Superuser or administrator force option; allows unlocking of files opened by other users.

You may now use a command like to following to unlock files of type =1

-r

Unlock the files associated with the specified client that were locked due to a failed p4 push command.

-s shelvedchange

If a file is locked in a pending shelved changelist, unlock it and keep it within the shelvedchange. This can typically only happen if a p4 submit -e command is aborted.

-x

In distributed environments, unlock files that have the +l filetype (exclusive open) but have become orphaned (this is typically only necessary in the event of an extended network outage between an edge server and the commit server).

g-opts

See Global Options.

Usage Notes

Can File Arguments Use Revision Specifier? Can File Arguments Use Revision Range? Minimal Access Level Required

No

No

write

Related Commands

To lock files so other users can’t submit them

p4 lock

To display all your open, locked files (UNIX)

p4 opened | grep "*locked*"