fmt_ccase
Format strings for command output
Applicability
Product |
Command type |
---|---|
ClearCase® |
general information |
Platform |
---|
UNIX |
Linux |
Windows |
Synopsis
- –fmt option
syntax (used in various reporting commands: annotate, describe, lshistory, lscheckout,
and so on):
- –fmt "format-string"
- format-string is a character string, composed of alphanumeric characters, conversion specifications, and escape sequences. It must be enclosed in double quotes ( " ).
Conversion specifications:
%a |
Attributes (modifiers: N, S, [attr-name]) |
%c |
Comment string (modifiers: N) |
%[checkout_replica]p |
The name of the replica that holds the checkout. |
%[checkout_replica]Op |
The object ID of the replica that holds the checkout. |
%d |
Date (modifiers: S, V, N, A, MA, BA, OA) |
%e |
Event description |
%f |
Checked-out version information (modifiers: R, T, [text]) |
%h |
Host name |
%i |
Indent level (modifier: [indent-level]) |
%l |
Labels (modifiers: C, N) |
%m |
Object kind (version, derived object, and so on) (modifiers: K) |
%Mf |
The mastership status of a checkout: either "mastered" or "nonmastered." |
%n |
Name of object (modifiers: D, E, L, O, S, PS, PV, V, X) |
%o |
Operation kind (checkin, lock, mkelem, and so on) |
%p |
Property value (modifiers: [property], C, D, O, S, T, X) |
%[c]t |
Starting column number (modifiers: N, S, T) |
%TUf |
The UUID of the view that holds the checkout. |
%u |
User/group information associated with the object's creation event (modifiers: F, G, L); see also %[owner]p and %[group]p. |
%% |
% character |
Escape sequences:
\n |
<NL> |
\t |
<TAB> |
\' |
Single quote |
\\ |
Literal (uninterpreted) backslash |
\nnn |
Character specified by octal code |
Description
Many ClearCase commands read information from a VOB database, format the data, and send it to standard output. (In most cases, the information is stored in event records, written by the command when it creates or modifies an object in a VOB. See the events_ccase reference page.) Some of these commands have a –fmt option, which you can use to format simple reports on VOB contents. Note that –fmt is a mutually exclusive alternative to the –short and –long options.
The following example shows how output-formatting options affect an lshistory command.
cmd-context lshistory -since 1-Feb util.c
–02-10T11:21 anne create version
"util.c@@/main/rel2_bugfix/1"
"fix bug: extra NL in time string"
–02-10T11:21 anne create version "util.c@@/main/rel2_bugfix/0"
–02-10T11:21 anne create branch "util.c@@/main/rel2_bugfix"
cmd-context lshistory -short -since 1-Feb util.c
util.c@@/main/rel2_bugfix/1
util.c@@/main/rel2_bugfix/0
util.c@@/main/rel2_bugfix
cmd-context lshistory -fmt "\tElement: %-13.13En Version: %Vn\n" -since
1-Feb util.c
Element: util.c Version: /main/rel2_bugfix/1
Element: util.c Version: /main/rel2_bugfix/0
Element: util.c Version: /main/rel2_bugfix
(A \t escape sequence tabs output to the next tab stop. Tab stops occur at eight-character intervals, except as described in the annotate reference page.)
Conversion specifications
A conversion specification identifies a particular data item to display and specifies its display format.
Syntax
- %[ min ][.max ][ MODIFIER [, ... ] ]keyletter
The conversion specification format closely resembles that of the C-language function printf():
- Percent sign (%)
- (Optional) A minimum and/or maximum field display width specifier, of the form min.max (see the section Specifying field width.)
- (Optional for some conversion specs) One or more modifier characters (uppercase) that specify one or more variants and/or a bracket-enclosed parameter (see the %a conversion specification)
- A key letter (lowercase), which indicates the kind of data to display
Unlike printf() specifiers, conversion specifications are not replaced by arguments supplied elsewhere on the command line; they are replaced automatically by cleartool, usually with field values extracted from event records.
These are the conversion specifications:
- %a
- All attached attributes. Attributes are listed as attr-name=value pairs.
These pairs are enclosed in parentheses and separated by a comma-space
combination (,SPACE). Variants:
%Na
No commas. Suppress the parentheses and commas in attribute list output; separate multiple attributes with spaces only.
%Sa
Value only. Display attribute values only (rather than attr=value)
%[attype]a
This attribute only. Display only the specified attribute, if it has been attached to the object
- %c
- Comment string. The user-supplied or system-generated comment
stored in an event record. A newline character is appended to the
comment string for display purposes only. Variant:
%Nc
No newline. Do not append a newline character to the comment string.
- %d
- Date/Time. The time stamp of the operation or event, in the format
specified by the locale setting of the computer. The following are
variants of %d:
%Sd
(Short) Date only.
%Vd
(Very long) Day of week, date, and time, in long format, where the month and day of the week are spelled out rather than abbreviated. The locale setting determines the exact format in which the date is displayed.
%Nd
(Numeric) Date and time in numeric form — yyyymmdd.time (time reported in 24-hour format).
%Ad
Age in days.
%MAd
Age in months.
%BAd
Age as a bar graph (longer bars for more recent events). A bar graph is drawn as a sequence of 0-5 number signs (#), representing the elapsed time since the reported operation as follows:
#####
Less than a week
####
Less than a month
###
Less than three months
##
Less than six months
#
Less than a year
More than a year
%OAd
Age as a bar graph (longer bars for older events). A bar graph is drawn as a sequence of 0-5 number signs (#), representing the elapsed time since the reported operation as follows:
#####
More than a year
####
Less than a year
###
Less than six months
##
Less than three months
#
Less than a month
Less than a week
- %e
- Event kind; a brief description of the event. The event kind is
derived from an event record's name, object kind, and operation kind
fields. Sample event kinds:
create version
create branch
make hyperlink "Merge" on version
make label "REL2" on version
lock branch type - %f
- Checked-out version information: For an element checked out to
your view, the version ID of the checked-out element; for an element
that is not checked out to your view, displays nothing. Variants:
%Rf
Checkout status — reserved or unreserved.
%Tf
View tag: The view tag of the view that checked out the element.
%[text]f
Text: Displays text as a prefix to the version ID.
- %h
- Name of the host where the event originated (the host on which the user %u was
running that user caused the event). The host name is as reported by uname(2)
(UNIX and Linux) or as stored in the ComputerName key in the
Windows Registry (Windows).
For a VOB replica, %h displays the name of the host at which the mkreplica –export command that created the replica was entered. For the original replica in a family, this is the host where the original VOB was located when the first mkreplica –export command was entered.
- %l
- Labels: For versions, all attached labels; the null string otherwise.
Labels are output as a comma-separated list, enclosed in parentheses.
A <SPACE> character follows each comma. Variants:
%Cl
Max labels: Specify the maximum number of labels to display with the max-field-width parameter (see Specifying field width). If there are more labels, "..." is appended to the output. If no max-field-width is specified, the maximum default value is 3.
%Nl
No commas: Suppress the parentheses and commas in label list output; separate labels with spaces only.
- %m
- Object kind: The kind of object involved in the operation. For
example:
- file
- element
- branch
- version
- stream
- derived object
- branch type
- label type
%Km
Object selector kind; for example, brtype or lbtype. For more information about object selectors, see the cleartool reference page.
- %n
- Name of object: For a file system object, the extended path name
(including the version ID for versions, and the DO ID for derived
objects); for a type object, its name. Variants:
%Dn
Database identifier (DBID): The unique database identifier of the object.
%En
Element name: For a file system object, its standard file or element name, or its path name; for a type object, its name.
%Ln
Leaf name: For any named object, its simple name. The terminal node of a path name. This modifier can be combined with others.
%On
Object identifier (OID): The unique identifier of a VOB object.
%Sn
Short name: For a version, a short form of the version ID: branch-pathname/version-number. For other objects, the null string.
%PSn
Predecessor Short name: For a version, a short form of the predecessor version's version ID: branch-pathname/version-number. For other objects, the null string.
%Vn
Version ID: For a version or derived object, the version ID; for other objects, the null string.
%PVn
Predecessor Version ID: For a version, the predecessor version's version ID; for other objects, the null string.
%Xn
Extended name: Same as default
%n output, but for checked-out versions, append the extension @@\branch-pathname\CHECKEDOUT. For non-file-system objects, prints the object selector. For more information about object selectors, see the cleartool reference page.
- %o
- Operation kind: The operation that caused the event to take place;
commonly, the name of a cleartool subcommand. For
example:
mkelem
mklabel
checkin
checkoutSee the events_ccase reference page for a complete list of operations and the commands that cause them.
- %[p]p
- Property value: Displays the value of the property specified in square brackets. If multiple values are returned, they are separated by spaces.
- %[p]Xp
- Extended property value: Displays the long form of the value of the property specified in square brackets. Not all property values have both long and short forms. Versions, in particular, are always displayed as though X had been specified.
- %[p]Cp
- Separate list items with a comma as well as a space.
- %[p]Qp
- Enclose path names in quotation marks.
- The following tables list variants and the objects to which they apply. For ClearCase variants, see Table 1. For variants related to
objects that are protected by Access Control Lists (ACLs), see Table 2. For UCM variants, see Table 3. For MultiSite variants,
see Table 4.
Table 1. Variants for ClearCase objects Variant
Applies to
Description
%[name]p
All objects
Same as %n, including variants.
%[object_kind]p
All objects
Kind of object. For example: version, file element, directory element, versioned object base, replica, branch type, and so on.
%[locked]p
All objects that can be locked
Lock status of the object: locked, unlocked, or obsolete.
%[activity]p
Versions
Activity whose change set contains the specified version.
%[version_predecessor]p
Versions
Version ID (branch path name and version number) of the version's predecessor version.
%[type]p
Versions, elements
Name of version or element's element type (for a list of element types, see type_manager); not to be confused with the object kind (for which the conversion specification is %m).
%[triggers]p
Elements
List of trigger types attached to element. Does not list all-element triggers. The list is displayed in the following format:
(trtype, trtype, trtype, ...)
%[triggers]Np
Elements
Suppresses parentheses and commas.
%[pool]p
Elements, shared derived objects
For an element, name of source pool. For a shared DO, name of DO pool.
%[pool]Cp
Elements
Name of cleartext pool.
%[pool]Dp
Shared derived objects
Name of derived object pool.
%[pool]Sp
Elements
Name of source pool.
%[DO_kind]p
Derived objects
Kind of derived object: shared, unshared, non-shareable.
%[DO_ref_count]p
Derived objects
Reference count for derived object.
%[slink_text]p
VOB symbolic links
Target of symbolic link, as displayed by cleartool ls.
%[slink_text]Tp
VOB symbolic links
Target of symbolic link, after link is traversed.
%[type_scope]p
Metadata object types
Object type's scope.
ordinary means that use of the type is limited to the current (or specified) VOB.
global means that the VOB is an administrative VOB and the type can be used in any client VOB of the administrative VOB or in any client VOB of a lower-level administrative VOB within an administrative VOB hierarchy.
local copy means that the type has been copied to the VOB from the administrative VOB that contains the master version of the type's definition.
%[type_constraint]p
Branch types, label types
Constraint on type object: one version per element or one version per branch.
%[trigger_kind]p
Trigger types
Kind of trigger type: element trigger, all element trigger, type trigger.
%[msdostext_mode]p
VOBs
State of MS-DOS text mode setting for VOB: enabled or disabled.
%[group]p
Group name.
%[owner]p (Windows only)
Login name of the object's current owner.
%[owner]Fp
Login name of the objects‘ current owner. The optional F argument lists the owner's full name.
%[hlink:filter]p
hyperlinks
Displays the hyperlink source and target, with an arrow pointing from the source to the target. The optional H argument lists only the hyperlink names. You can optionally specify a filter string, preceded by a colon. This filter if present, restricts the output to names that match the filter string. Case is considered when matching the string.
%[aliases]ACQp
Files
Displays the file name and aliases. Path names can be quoted, separated by commas, or both. Specify A to include aliases displayed by describe -all. This variant does not apply to directories, but only to hard-linked files.
%[permissions]p
File system objects
Displays the object's permissions using the standard "rwx" notation.
%[flevel]p
VOBs
Displays the feature level of the VOB.
%[universal_selector]p\n
All objects
An object identifier that persists, even if the object is renamed. The output is of the form oid:oid@vobuuid:vobuuid.
Table 2. Variants for ACL-protected ClearCase objects Variant
Applies to
Description
%[rolemap]Xp
VOB object, policy, rolemap, directory elements, file elements
Rolemap that protects this object, optionally displayed in long format (X).
%[policy]Xp
Rolemap
Policy that this rolemap implements, optionally displayed in long format (X).
%[objects_protected]CQNp
Rolemap
Space-separated list of objects protected by this rolemap, optionally separated by comma ( C ), new-line (N), and enclosed in quotes (Q).
%[implementing_rolemaps]CNQXp
Policy
Space-separated list of rolemaps that implement this policy, optionally separated by comma ( C ), new-line (N), enclosed in quotes (Q) and displayed in long format (X).
The variants in Table 3 apply only to UCM objects.
Table 3. Variants for UCM objects Variant
Applies to
Description
%[contrib_acts]CXp
UCM activities
List of activities that contributed to the change set of an integration activity
%[crm_record_id]p
UCM activities
The ClearQuest® record ID
%[crm_record_type]p
UCM activities
The ClearQuest record type
%[crm_state]p
UCM activities
The activity's state
%[headline]p
UCM activities
The activity's headline
%[name_resolver_view]p
UCM activities
A "best guess" view for resolving the names of versions in a change set
%[stream]Xp
UCM activities
The stream that contains the activity
%[versions]CQp
UCM activities
List of versions in activity's change set
%[view]p
UCM activities
The view that the activity is set in
%[activities]CXp
UCM baselines
The baseline's activities
%[bl_stream]Xp
UCM baselines
The stream in which the baseline is created
%[component]Xp
UCM baselines
The component associated with the baseline
%[components]CXp UCM streams
The components for which the stream has foundation baselines
%[mod_comps]CXp UCM streams
The modifiable components for which the stream has foundation baselines
%[non_mod_comps]CXp UCM streams
The non-modifiable components for which the stream has foundation baselines
%[depends_on]Cp
UCM baselines
The baselines that the composite baseline directly depends on
%[depends_on_closure]Cp
UCM baselines
All of the baselines in the full dependence graph of a composite baseline
%[member_of]Cp
UCM baselines
The composite baselines of which the baseline is a direct member
%[member_of_closure]Cp
UCM baselines
All composite baselines of which the baseline is a direct or indirect member
%[label_status]p
UCM baselines
The label status of a baseline: full, incremental, unlabeled, no versions to label, or initially labeled
%[plevel]p
UCM baselines
The baseline's promotion level
%[predecessor]p
UCM baselines
The baseline's predecessor
%[initial_bl]Xp
UCM components
Initial baseline of the component
%[root_dir]p
UCM components
The root directory for the component
%[contains_folders]CXp
UCM folders
Subfolders of the folder
%[contains_projects]CXp
UCM folders
Projects contained by the folder
%[folder]Xp
UCM folders
The parent folder for the folder
%[crm_database]p
UCM projects
The name of the ClearQuest database
%[def_rebase_level]p
UCM projects
The promotion level required of a baseline before it can be used as the source of a rebase operation
%[dstreams]CXp
UCM projects
The project development streams
%[folder]Xp
UCM projects
The parent folder for the project
%[istream]Xp
UCM projects
The project integration stream
%[mod_comps]CXp
UCM projects
The modifiable components for a project
%[model]p
UCM projects
The project's model
%[rec_bls]CXp
UCM projects
The recommended baselines of a project's integration stream
%[plevels]p
UCM PVOBs
The promotion levels defined by the PVOB
%[activities]CXp
UCM streams
Activities that are part of the stream
%[config_spec]p
UCM streams
Config spec of object
%[def_deliver_tgt]Xp
UCM streams
The default stream that the stream will deliver to
%[dstreams]CXp
UCM streams
The child streams of an integration stream or a development stream
%[found_bls]CXp
UCM streams
The foundation baselines for the stream
%[latest_bls]CXp
UCM streams
Latest baseline in each component in a stream's configuration
%[project]Xp
UCM streams
The project the stream is part of
%[read_only]p
UCM streams
read only if the stream is read-only, empty otherwise
%[rec_bls]CXp
UCM streams
The recommended baselines of an integration stream or a parent development stream
%[views]p
UCM streams
Views attached to the stream
%[policies]Cp
UCM streams and projects
Policies for a stream or project, in the form keyword setting, where keyword is a UCM policy keyword and setting is one of enabled or disabled.
%[latest_versions]CQNUp
UCM activities
List of the latest versions in an activity's change set.
The variants in Table 4 apply only to objects in replicated VOBs (DevOps Code ClearCase MultiSite product).
Variant |
Applies to |
Description |
---|---|---|
%[master]p |
All objects that have mastership |
Name of object's master replica |
%[master]Op |
All objects that have mastership |
OID of object's master replica |
%[reqmaster]p |
Replicas, branch types, branches |
Request for mastership status of the object. For a replica:
For a branch type:
For a branch:
|
%[type_mastership]p |
Attribute types, hyperlink types, label types |
Kind of mastership of the type: shared or unshared. |
%[replica_name]p |
VOBs |
Replica name of the specified VOB. |
%[vob_replication]p |
VOBs |
Replication status of VOB: replicated or unreplicated. |
%[replica_host]p |
Replicas |
Name of replica host. |
- %[c]t
- Starting column number: Starts printing at the column number specified
in square brackets. An overflow condition exists if the current position
on the line is beyond the starting column number. By default, when
an overflow condition occurs, the %t directive is
ignored. Variants:
%[c]Nt
When an overflow condition occurs, print a newline and resume printing at the starting column number.
%[c]St
When an overflow condition occurs, print one space before printing the next value.
%[c]Tt
When an overflow condition occurs, print a tab before printing the next value.
- %u
- Login name of the user associated with the event. Variants:
%Fu
Full name of the user. This information is taken from the password database.
%Gu
Group name of the user.
%Lu
Login name and group of the user, in the form user.group.
- %%
- Percent character (%).
Specifying field width
A conversion specification can include an optional field width specifier, which assigns a minimum and/or maximum width, in characters, to the data field display. For example, the conversion specifier %10.15Lu will display, for each output line, the user's login name and group with a minimum of 10 characters (space padded if necessary) but not more than 15.
Usage rules:
- A single number is interpreted as a minimum width.
- To supply only a maximum width, put a decimal point before the number (for example, %.10En) or a zero and decimal point (%0.10En).
- To specify a constant display width, set the minimum and maximum widths to the same value (%20.20c).
- Values smaller than the specified minimum width are aligned on the right (padded left). A negative minimum width value (%–20.20c) aligns short values on the left.
- Values longer than the specified maximum width are truncated from the right. A negative maximum width value (%15.–15Sn) truncates long values from the left.
- A maximum width specifier has special meaning when used with the %Cl specifier. For example, %.5Cl prints a version's first five labels only, followed by "...".
Examples
The UNIX system and Linux examples in this section are written for use in csh. If you use another shell, you might need to use different quoting and escaping conventions.
The Windows examples that include wildcards or quoting are written for use in cleartool interactive mode. If you use cleartool single-command mode, you might need to change the wildcards and quoting to make your command interpreter process the command appropriately.
In cleartool single-command mode, cmd-context represents the UNIX system and Linux shells or Windows command interpreter prompt, followed by the cleartool command. In cleartool interactive mode, cmd-context represents the interactive cleartool prompt.
- Format the output from lsco –cview.
cmd-context lsco -cview -fmt "\t%-10.10n (from %8.8PVn) %d %u\n"
util.c (from /main/23) 2007-02-18T14:12:48 anne
main.c (from /main/46) 2007-02-18T18:42:33 anne
msg.c (from /bugfix/11) 2007-02-19T10:45:13 anne
msg.h (from /bugfix/3) 2007-02-19T14:51:55 anne - Format the event history of a
file element. (The command line, including the quoted format string,
constitutes a single input line. The input line below is broken to
improve readability. Spaces are significant.)
cmd-context lshistory -fmt "OBJ-NAME: %-20.20n\n USER: %-8.8u\n DATE: %d\\n OPERATION:\t%-12.12o\n OBJ-TYPE:\t%-15.15m\n EVENT:\t%e\n COMMENT: %c\n" util.c OBJ-NAME: util.c@@/main/3 USER: anne DATE: 2007-05-10T09:24:38 OPERATION: checkin OBJ-TYPE: version EVENT: create version COMMENT: fix bug r2-307 OBJ-NAME: util.c@@/main/2 USER: anne DATE: 2007-05-10T09:09:29 OPERATION: checkin OBJ-TYPE: version EVENT: create version COMMENT: ready for code review
- Describe a checked-out element, util.c.
cmd-context describe -fmt "\tVer:\t%f\n\tPrefix:\t%[MY TEXT]%f\n\t
Status:\t%Rf\n\tView:\t%Tf\n" util.c
Ver: /main/23
Prefix: MY TEXT/main/23
Status: reserved
View: eba_view - Display the type of a file element.
cmd-context describe -fmt "Type: %[type]p\n" util.c@@
Type: text_file - Display the target of a symbolic
link and the target after the link is traversed.
cmd-context describe –fmt "%n\t%[slink_text]p\t%[slink_text]Tp\n"
link1.txt
link1.txt file.txt ..\dev\file.txt - Display the master replica of
all label types in a VOB replica.
cmd-context lstype –fmt "Label type: %n\tMaster: %[master]p\n" –kind
lbtype
Label type: BACKSTOP Master: evanston@/vobs/tromba
Label type: CHECKEDOUT Master: evanston@/vobs/tromba
Label type: LATEST Master: evanston@/vobs/tromba
Label type: V3.4 Master: paris@/vobs/tromba - Display the name of an element,
using tabular format. The command is a single input line; line breaks
are added for readability.
cmd-context describe -fmt
"%[4]tName:%[6]t%[name]p\n
%[4]tName:%[6]Nt%[name]p\n
%[4]tName:%[6]St%[name]p\n
%[4]tName:%[6]Tt%[name]p\n" util.c
Name:util.c@@\main\30
Name:
util.c@@\main\30
Name: util.c@@\main\30
Name: util.c@@\main\30 - Mimic the output from lshistory –long.
Note the use of single quotes to enclose the format string, which
includes literal double quotes.
cleartool lshistory -fmt '%d %Fu (%u@%h)\n %e "%n"\n "%Nc"\n' util.c 2007-05-11T09:24:38 Anne Duvo (anne@neptune) create version "util.c@@/main/3" "fix bug r2-307" 2007-05-10T09:09:29 Ravi Singha (ravi@mercury) create version "util.c@@/main/2" "ready for code review" . . .
- Mimic the output from lshistory
–long. Note that in cleartool single-command
mode, backslashes (\) are used to escape double quotes in the format
string.
cleartool lshistory -fmt "%d %Fu (%u@%h)\n %e \"%n\"\n \"%Nc\"\n" util.c 2007-05-11T09:24:38 Anne Duvo (anne@neptune) create version "util.c@@\main\3" "fix bug r2-307" 2007-05-10T09:09:29 Ravi Singha (ravi@mercury) create version "util.c@@\main\2" "ready for code review" . . .
- Describe the element main.c in
detail. This example illustrates many of the conversion specifications
(but does not use field width specifiers). Again, the command is a
single input line; line breaks are added for readability.
cmd-context describe -fmt "Name (default): %n\n
Element name: %En\n
Leaf name: %Ln\n
Short name: %Sn\n
Predecessor short name: %PSn\n
Version ID: %Vn\n
Predecessor version ID: %PVn\n
Extended name: %Xn\n
Attributes: %a\n
Attr values only: %Sa\n
Attrs without commas or parens: %Na\n
This attr only: %[Tested]a\n
Comment: %c
Date/Time: \tdefault: %d\n
\t\tshort: %Sd\n
\t\tlong: %Vd\n
Age in days: %Ad\n
Age in months: %MAd\n
Age graph (long = new): %BAd\n
Age graph (long = old): %OAd\n
Host: %h\n
Labels: %Cl\n
Labels without commas or parens: %Nl\n
Object kind: %m\n
Operation kind: %o\n
Event kind: %e\n
User (default): %u\n
Full user name: %Fu\n
Group name: %Gu\n
Long name: %Lu\n\n" main.c
Name (default): main.c@@/main/34
Element name: main.c
Leaf name: 34
Short name: /main/34
Predecessor short name: /main/33
Version ID: /main/34
Predecessor version ID: /main/33
Extended name: main.c@@/main/34
Attributes: (Tested="yes", QAlevel=4, Responsible="anne")
Attr values only: ("yes", 4, "anne")
Attrs without commas or parens: Tested="yes"
QAlevel=4 Responsible="anne"
This attr only: (Tested="yes")
Comment: still needs QA
Date/Time: default: 2007-07-30T15:02:49
short: 2007-07-30
long: Tuesday 2007-07-30T15:02:49
Age in days: 42
Age in months: 1
Age graph (long = new): ####
Age graph (long = old): ##
Host: neptune
Labels: (Rel3.1C, Rel3.1D, Rel3.1E)
Labels without commas or parens: Rel3.1C Rel3.1D Rel3.1E
Object kind: version
Operation kind: checkin
Event kind: create version
User (default): anne
Full user name: Anne Duvo
Group name: dev
Long name: anne.dev