Lock command (Team Foundation Version Control)
Azure DevOps Services | Azure DevOps Server 2022 - Azure DevOps Server 2019
Visual Studio 2019 | Visual Studio 2022
The Team Foundation Version Control (TFVC) lock
command locks or unlocks a file or folder. The command denies or restores the right of users to check out an item for edit into a different workspace or to check in pending changes to an item from a different workspace.
Prerequisites
To use the lock
command, you must have the Lock permission set to Allow. You need the Unlock other user's changes permission set to Allow to remove a lock held by another user if you don't have Write permission for that user's workspace. For more information, see Default TFVC permissions.
Syntax
tf lock itemspec /lock:(none|checkout|checkin)
[/workspace:workspacename] [/recursive] [/login:username,[password]] [/collection:TeamProjectCollectionUrl]
Parameters
Arguments
Argument
Description
<itemspec>
Identifies the file or folder to lock or unlock. For more information about how TFVC parses the itemspec
to determine which items are within scope, see Use options to modify how a command functions.
Note
You can specify more than one itemspec
argument.
<workspacename>
The user-provided value for the /workspace
option.
<username>
Provides a value to the /login
option. You can specify a username
value as either DOMAIN\username
or username
.
<TeamProjectCollectionUrl>
The URL of the project collection that contains the file or folder that you want to lock or unlock, for example http://myserver:8080/tfs/DefaultCollection
.
Options
Option
Description
/lock
Specifies a lock type or removes a lock from an item. For more information, see Understand lock types.
Lock options:
None
: Removes a lock from an item.Checkin
: Enables an item to be checked out and edited in all workspaces but prevents users from checking in changes to the item outside the specified/workspace
until you explicitly release the check-in lock. If the specified item is locked in any other workspace, the lock operation fails.Checkout
: Prevents users from checking in or checking out the specified items until you explicitly release the lock. If users have locked any one of the specified items, or if pending changes exist against any one of the items, the lock operation fails.
/workspace
Specifies the name of a different workspace in which to apply the lock. By default, the lock is applied in the workspace in which you are currently.
/login
Specifies the user name and password to authenticate the user with Azure DevOps.
/collection
Specifies the project collection.
Remarks
You can use the lock command to temporarily freeze the TFVC server version of an item so that you can check in a pending change without having to resolve any merge conflicts. If you want to permanently prevent access to an item in the TFVC server, you should use the Permission command instead.
Note
As a courtesy to your teammates, notify them when you apply a lock to an item, explain why you are doing this, and estimate when you plan to remove the lock, if you can.
For more information on how to use the tf
command-line utility, see Use Team Foundation version control commands.
How to lock an item
You can lock an item using the lock
command or by specifying a lock
option during the commission of several other tf
command-line utility commands, including:
- Rename command (Team Foundation Version Control)
- Checkout and edit commands
- Delete command (Team Foundation Version Control)
- Undelete command
- Merge command
- Branch command
- Add command
For add
and branch
, the lock is placed on the namespace where the new item will be created. Locks placed with rename
apply both to the old and new namespaces. For more information, see Lock and unlock folders or files.
Lock types
TFVC provides two types of locks: checkin
and checkout
.
A check-in lock is less restrictive than a check-out lock. When you apply a check-in lock, users can continue to make local changes to the item in other workspaces. The changes can't be checked in until you explicitly remove the check-in lock from the workspace.
A check-out lock is more restrictive than a check-in lock. When you apply a check-out lock to a version-controlled file or folder, users can neither check out the item for edit nor check in pre-existing pending changes. You can't acquire a check-out lock if there are currently any pending changes to an item.
For more information about when to apply a check-out lock and when to apply a check-in lock, see Understand lock types.
How locking works
If you have a file checked out when you lock it, its status is modified to contain the new lock type. If the files aren't checked out, a lock change is added to the set of pending workspace changes. Unlike the checkout
command, lock
doesn't automatically make a file editable.
Locks on folders are implicitly recursive. If you lock a folder, you don't have to lock the files it contains unless you want to apply the more restrictive check-out lock to a file in a folder that has a check-in lock.
Unlock an item
You can unlock a locked item by using the none
option. TFVC also unlocks an item automatically when you check in pending changes in the workspace.
You can determine which files are locked in the TFVC server and by whom the files were locked by using the Status command.
Examples
The following example prevents other users from checking out 314.cs.
c:\projects>tf lock /lock:checkout 314.cs
The following example prevents other users from checking in changes to 1256.cs but enables them to check it out in their workspaces.
c:\projects>tf lock /lock:checkin 1256.cs
The following example prevents other users from pending changes to any items in the $/src folder in the TFVC server.
c:\projects>tf lock /lock:checkout $/src
The following example unlocks and makes all files in the $/src TFVC server folder available for check-out and check-in by other users.
c:\projects>tf lock /lock:none $/src