SYNOPSIS
- rmbl [ –c·omment comment | –cfi·le pname | –cq·uery
- | –cqe·ach | –nc·omment ] [ –f·orce ] baseline-selector ...
DESCRIPTION
The rmbl command
deletes one or more baselines. Versions associated with the baseline are not
deleted, only the baseline relationship among the versions.
RESTRICTIONS
Identities
You must have one
of the following identities:
- Baseline
owner
- Project
VOB owner
- root (UNIX)
- Member
of the ClearCase administrators group (ClearCase on Windows only)
- Local
administrator of the ClearCase LT server host (ClearCase LT on Windows
only)
Locks
An error occurs if there
are locks on any of the following objects: the project VOB, the baseline.
Mastership
(Replicated VOBs
only) Your current replica must master the baseline.
Other
The following restrictions
apply:
- The
baseline cannot serve as a foundation baseline for any stream.
- The
baseline cannot be an initial baseline for a component.
- The
baseline cannot be deleted if it is a full baseline and serves as the backstop
for any incremental baseline.
- The baseline cannot be deleted
if it is a member of a composite baseline.
OPTIONS AND ARGUMENTS
Event Records and Comments
- Default
- Creates one or more event records,
with commenting controlled by your .clearcase_profile file
(default: –nc). See the comments reference
page. Comments can be edited with chevent.
- –c·omment comment | –cfi·le comment-file-pname |–cq·uery | –cqe·ach | –nc·omment
- Overrides the default with the option you specify. See the comments reference
page.
The comment is stored in a deletion event on
the VOB object.
Confirmation Step
- Default
- Prompts for confirmation that the specified
baseline is to be deleted.
- –f·orce
- Suppresses the confirmation step.
Specifying the Baseline
- Default
- None.
- baseline-selector ...
- Specifies one or more baselines to delete.
baseline-selector is
of the form [baseline:]baseline-name[@vob-selector],
where vob-selector specifies the baseline's project
VOB.
EXAMPLES
The UNIX examples in this section are written for use in csh.
If you use another shell, you may 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 may 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 shell or Windows command interpreter prompt, followed by the cleartool command.
In cleartool interactive mode, cmd-context represents
the interactive cleartool prompt.