head	1.2;
access;
symbols
	rpm-4_2_1-release:1.1.1.1
	rpm-4_1_1-release:1.1.1.1
	rpm-4_2-release:1.1.1.1
	rpm-4_2:1.1.1.1.0.4
	rpm-4_1:1.1.1.1.0.2
	postmerge-file-3_39:1.1.1.1
	premerge-file-3_39:1.1.1.1
	file-3_39:1.1.1.1
	pre-file-3_39:1.1.1.1
	postmerge-file-3_38:1.1.1.1
	premerge-file-3_38:1.1.1.1
	file-3_38:1.1.1.1
	pre-file-3_38:1.1.1.1
	file-3_37-release:1.1.1.1
	file-vendor:1.1.1;
locks; strict;
comment	@# @;


1.2
date	2003.04.15.16.58.35;	author jbj;	state dead;
branches;
next	1.1;

1.1
date	2002.09.30.21.45.34;	author jbj;	state Exp;
branches
	1.1.1.1;
next	;

1.1.1.1
date	2002.09.30.21.45.34;	author jbj;	state Exp;
branches
	1.1.1.1.4.1;
next	;

1.1.1.1.4.1
date	2003.12.01.21.20.01;	author jbj;	state dead;
branches;
next	;


desc
@@


1.2
log
@Move magic creation to sub-directory.
@
text
@
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# sccs:  file(1) magic for SCCS archives
#
# SCCS archive structure:
# \001h01207
# \001s 00276/00000/00000
# \001d D 1.1 87/09/23 08:09:20 ian 1 0
# \001c date and time created 87/09/23 08:09:20 by ian
# \001e
# \001u
# \001U
# ... etc.
# Now '\001h' happens to be the same as the 3B20's a.out magic number (0550).
# *Sigh*. And these both came from various parts of the USG.
# Maybe we should just switch everybody from SCCS to RCS!
# Further, you can't just say '\001h0', because the five-digit number
# is a checksum that could (presumably) have any leading digit,
# and we don't have regular expression matching yet. 
# Hence the following official kludge:
8	string		\001s\ 			SCCS archive data
@


1.1
log
@Initial revision
@
text
@@


1.1.1.1
log
@track: auto import
@
text
@@


1.1.1.1.4.1
log
@Merge from top-of-stack.
@
text
@@

