The scripts in this package simplify working with a series of patches. The usual tasks like applying, refreshing and reversing are supported. Please see the paper "How To Survive With Many Patches /or/ Introduction to Quilt" for an introduction. Command reference ================= quilt add [-P patch] {file} ... Add one or more files to the topmost or named patch. Files must be added to the patch before being modified. Files that are modified by patches already applied on top of the specified patch cannot be added. -P patch Patch to add files to. quilt annotate [-P patch] {file} Print an annotated listing of the specified file showing which patches modify which lines. Only applied patches are included. -P patch Stop checking for changes at the specified rather than the topmost patch. quilt applied [patch] Print a list of applied patches, or all patches up to and including the specified patch in the file series. quilt delete [-r] [--backup] [patch|-n] Remove the specified or topmost patch from the series file. If the patch is applied, quilt will attempt to remove it first. (Only the topmost patch can be removed right now.) -n Delete the next patch after topmost, rather than the specified or topmost patch. -r Remove the deleted patch file from the patches directory as well. --backup Rename the patch file to patch~ rather than deleting it. Ignored if not used with `-r'. quilt diff [-p n|-p ab] [-u|-U num|-c|-C num] [--combine patch|-z] [-R] [-P patch] [--snapshot] [--diff=utility] [--no-timestamps] [--no-index] [--sort] [--color[=always|auto|never]] [file ...] Produces a diff of the specified file(s) in the topmost or specified patch. If no files are specified, all files that are modified are included. -p n Create a -p n style patch (-p0 or -p1 are supported). -p ab Create a -p1 style patch, but use a/file and b/file as the original and new filenames instead of the default dir.orig/file and dir/file names. -u, -U num, -c, -C num Create a unified diff (-u, -U) with num lines of context. Create a context diff (-c, -C) with num lines of context. The number of context lines defaults to 3. --no-timestamps Do not include file timestamps in patch headers. --no-index Do not output Index: lines. -z Write to standard output the changes that have been made relative to the topmost or specified patch. -R Create a reverse diff. -P patch Create a diff for the specified patch. (Defaults to the topmost patch.) --combine patch Create a combined diff for all patches between this patch and the patch specified with -P. A patch name of `-' is equivalent to specifying the first applied patch. --snapshot Diff against snapshot (see `quilt snapshot -h'). --diff=utility Use the specified utility for generating the diff. The utility is invoked with the original and new file name as arguments. --color[=always|auto|never] Use syntax coloring (auto activates it only if the output is a tty). --sort Sort files by their name instead of preserving the original order. quilt edit file ... Edit the specified file(s) in $EDITOR after adding it (them) to the topmost patch. quilt files [-v] [-a] [-l] [--combine patch] [patch] Print the list of files that the topmost or specified patch changes. -a List all files in all applied patches. -l Add patch name to output. -v Verbose, more user friendly output. --combine patch Create a listing for all patches between this patch and the topmost or specified patch. A patch name of `-' is equivalent to specifying the first applied patch. quilt fold [-R] [-q] [-f] [-p strip-level] Integrate the patch read from standard input into the topmost patch: After making sure that all files modified are part of the topmost patch, the patch is applied with the specified strip level (which defaults to 1). -R Apply patch in reverse. -q Quiet operation. -f Force apply, even if the patch has rejects. Unless in quiet mode, apply the patch interactively: the patch utility may ask questions. -p strip-level The number of pathname components to strip from file names when applying patchfile. quilt fork [new_name] Fork the topmost patch. Forking a patch means creating a verbatim copy of it under a new name, and use that new name instead of the original one in the current series. This is useful when a patch has to be modified, but the original version of it should be preserved, e.g. because it is used in another series, or for the history. A typical sequence of commands would be: fork, edit, refresh. If new_name is missing, the name of the forked patch will be the current patch name, followed by `-2'. If the patch name already ends in a dash-and-number, the number is further incremented (e.g., patch.diff, patch-2.diff, patch-3.diff). quilt graph [--all] [--reduce] [--lines[=num]] [--edge-labels=files] [-T ps] [patch] Generate a dot(1) directed graph showing the dependencies between applied patches. A patch depends on another patch if both touch the same file or, with the --lines option, if their modifications overlap. Unless otherwise specified, the graph includes all patches that the topmost patch depends on. When a patch name is specified, instead of the topmost patch, create a graph for the specified patch. The graph will include all other patches that this patch depends on, as well as all patches that depend on this patch. --all Generate a graph including all applied patches and their dependencies. (Unapplied patches are not included.) --reduce Eliminate transitive edges from the graph. --lines[=num] Compute dependencies by looking at the lines the patches modify. Unless a different num is specified, two lines of context are included. --edge-labels=files Label graph edges with the file names that the adjacent patches modify. -T ps Directly produce a PostScript output file. quilt grep [-h|options] {pattern} Grep through the source files, recursively, skipping patches and quilt meta-information. If no filename argument is given, the whole source tree is searched. Please see the grep(1) manual page for options. -h Print this help. The grep -h option can be passed after a double-dash (--). Search expressions that start with a dash can be passed after a second double-dash (-- --). quilt header [-a|-r|-e] [--backup] [--strip-diffstat] [--strip-trailing-whitespace] [patch] Print or change the header of the topmost or specified patch. -a, -r, -e Append to (-a) or replace (-r) the exiting patch header, or edit (-e) the header in $EDITOR. If none of these options is given, print the patch header. --strip-diffstat Strip diffstat output from the header. --strip-trailing-whitespace Strip trailing whitespace at the end of lines of the header. --backup Create a backup copy of the old version of a patch as patch~. quilt import [-p num] [-R] [-P patch] [-f] [-d {o|a|n}] patchfile ... Import external patches. The patches will be inserted following the current top patch, and must be pushed after import to apply them. -p num Number of directory levels to strip when applying (default=1) -R Apply patch in reverse. -P patch Patch filename to use inside quilt. This option can only be used when importing a single patch. -f Overwrite/update existing patches. -d {o|a|n} When overwriting in existing patch, keep the old (o), all (a), or new (n) patch header. If both patches include headers, this option must be specified. This option is only effective when -f is used. quilt mail {--mbox file|--send} [-m text] [-M file] [--prefix prefix] [--sender ...] [--from ...] [--to ...] [--cc ...] [--bcc ...] [--subject ...] [--reply-to message] [--charset ...] [--signature file] [first_patch [last_patch]] Create mail messages from a specified range of patches, or all patches in the series file, and either store them in a mailbox file, or send them immediately. The editor is opened with a template for the introduction. Please see /home/user/librerouteros-Cpe210v3/staging_dir/host/share/doc/quilt/README.MAIL for details. When specifying a range of patches, a first patch name of `-' denotes the first, and a last patch name of `-' denotes the last patch in the series. -m text Text to use as the text in the introduction. When this option is used, the editor will not be invoked, and the patches will be processed immediately. -M file Like the -m option, but read the introduction from file. --prefix prefix Use an alternate prefix in the bracketed part of the subjects generated. Defaults to `patch'. --mbox file Store all messages in the specified file in mbox format. The mbox can later be sent using formail, for example. --send Send the messages directly. --sender The envelope sender address to use. The address must be of the form `user@domain.name'. No display name is allowed. --from, --subject The values for the From and Subject headers to use. If no --from option is given, the value of the --sender option is used. --to, --cc, --bcc Append a recipient to the To, Cc, or Bcc header. --charset Specify a particular message encoding on systems which don't use UTF-8 or ISO-8859-15. This character encoding must match the one used in the patches. --signature file Append the specified signature to messages (defaults to ~/.signature if found; use `-' for no signature). --reply-to message Add the appropriate headers to reply to the specified message. quilt new [-p n|-p ab] {patchname} Create a new patch with the specified file name, and insert it after the topmost patch. The name can be prefixed with a sub-directory name, allowing for grouping related patches together. -p n Create a -p n style patch (-p0 or -p1 are supported). -p ab Create a -p1 style patch, but use a/file and b/file as the original and new filenames instead of the default dir.orig/file and dir/file names. Quilt can be used in sub-directories of a source tree. It determines the root of a source tree by searching for a patches directory above the current working directory. Create a patches directory in the intended root directory if quilt chooses a top-level directory that is too high up in the directory tree. quilt next [patch] Print the name of the next patch after the specified or topmost patch in the series file. quilt patches [-v] [--color[=always|auto|never]] {file} [files...] Print the list of patches that modify any of the specified files. (Uses a heuristic to determine which files are modified by unapplied patches. Note that this heuristic is much slower than scanning applied patches.) -v Verbose, more user friendly output. --color[=always|auto|never] Use syntax coloring (auto activates it only if the output is a tty). quilt pop [-afRqv] [--refresh] [num|patch] Remove patch(es) from the stack of applied patches. Without options, the topmost patch is removed. When a number is specified, remove the specified number of patches. When a patch name is specified, remove patches until the specified patch end up on top of the stack. Patch names may include the patches/ prefix, which means that filename completion can be used. -a Remove all applied patches. -f Force remove. The state before the patch(es) were applied will be restored from backup files. -R Always verify if the patch removes cleanly; don't rely on timestamp checks. -q Quiet operation. -v Verbose operation. --refresh Automatically refresh every patch before it gets unapplied. quilt previous [patch] Print the name of the previous patch before the specified or topmost patch in the series file. quilt push [-afqvm] [--fuzz=N] [--merge[=merge|diff3]] [--leave-rejects] [--color[=always|auto|never]] [--refresh] [num|patch] Apply patch(es) from the series file. Without options, the next patch in the series file is applied. When a number is specified, apply the specified number of patches. When a patch name is specified, apply all patches up to and including the specified patch. Patch names may include the patches/ prefix, which means that filename completion can be used. -a Apply all patches in the series file. -q Quiet operation. -f Force apply, even if the patch has rejects. -v Verbose operation. --fuzz=N Set the maximum fuzz factor (default: 2). -m, --merge[=merge|diff3] Merge the patch file into the original files (see patch(1)). --leave-rejects Leave around the reject files patch produced, even if the patch is not actually applied. --color[=always|auto|never] Use syntax coloring (auto activates it only if the output is a tty). --refresh Automatically refresh every patch after it was successfully applied. quilt refresh [-p n|-p ab] [-u|-U num|-c|-C num] [-z[new_name]] [-f] [--no-timestamps] [--no-index] [--diffstat] [--sort] [--backup] [--strip-trailing-whitespace] [patch] Refreshes the specified patch, or the topmost patch by default. Documentation that comes before the actual patch in the patch file is retained. It is possible to refresh patches that are not on top. If any patches on top of the patch to refresh modify the same files, the script aborts by default. Patches can still be refreshed with -f. In that case this script will print a warning for each shadowed file, changes by more recent patches will be ignored, and only changes in files that have not been modified by any more recent patches will end up in the specified patch. -p n Create a -p n style patch (-p0 or -p1 supported). -p ab Create a -p1 style patch, but use a/file and b/file as the original and new filenames instead of the default dir.orig/file and dir/file names. -u, -U num, -c, -C num Create a unified diff (-u, -U) with num lines of context. Create a context diff (-c, -C) with num lines of context. The number of context lines defaults to 3. -z[new_name] Create a new patch containing the changes instead of refreshing the topmost patch. If no new name is specified, `-2' is added to the original patch name, etc. (See the fork command.) --no-timestamps Do not include file timestamps in patch headers. --no-index Do not output Index: lines. --diffstat Add a diffstat section to the patch header, or replace the existing diffstat section. -f Enforce refreshing of a patch that is not on top. --backup Create a backup copy of the old version of a patch as patch~. --sort Sort files by their name instead of preserving the original order. --strip-trailing-whitespace Strip trailing whitespace at the end of lines. quilt remove [-P patch] {file} ... Remove one or more files from the topmost or named patch. Files that are modified by patches on top of the specified patch cannot be removed. -P patch Remove named files from the named patch. quilt rename [-P patch] new_name Rename the topmost or named patch. -P patch Patch to rename. quilt revert [-P patch] {file} ... Revert uncommitted changes to the topmost or named patch for the specified file(s): after the revert, 'quilt diff -z' will show no differences for those files. Changes to files that are modified by patches on top of the specified patch cannot be reverted. -P patch Revert changes in the named patch. quilt series [--color[=always|auto|never]] [-v] Print the names of all patches in the series file. --color[=always|auto|never] Use syntax coloring (auto activates it only if the output is a tty). -v Verbose, more user friendly output. quilt setup [-d path-prefix] [-v] [--sourcedir dir] [--fuzz=N] [--slow|--fast] {specfile|seriesfile} Initializes a source tree from an rpm spec file or a quilt series file. -d Optional path prefix for the resulting source tree. --sourcedir Directory that contains the package sources. Defaults to `.'. -v Verbose debug output. --fuzz=N Set the maximum fuzz factor (needs rpm 4.6 or later). --slow Use the original, slow method to process the spec file. This is the default for now, but that might change in the future. In this mode, rpmbuild generates a working tree in a temporary directory while all its actions are recorded, and then everything is replayed from scratch in the target directory. --fast Use an alternative, faster method to process the spec file. In this mode, rpmbuild is told to generate a working tree directly in the target directory. If the input is a series file, it is assumed that all archives have been extracted manually beforehand. quilt snapshot [-d] Take a snapshot of the current working state. After taking the snapshot, the tree can be modified in the usual ways, including pushing and popping patches. A diff against the tree at the moment of the snapshot can be generated with `quilt diff --snapshot'. -d Only remove current snapshot. quilt top Print the name of the topmost patch on the current stack of applied patches. quilt unapplied [patch] Print a list of patches that are not applied, or all patches that follow the specified patch in the series file. quilt upgrade Upgrade the meta-data in a working tree from an old version of quilt to the current version. This command is only needed when the quilt meta-data format has changed, and the working tree still contains old-format meta-data. In that case, quilt will request to run `quilt upgrade'. Typical Usages: New patches; Importing patches; Patch management ====================================================================== Add new patches: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1. create a new patch: quilt new {patchname, e.g., sysctl_fix.patch} 2. add/edit file(s): quilt edit filepath or: 2a. add file(s) to patch: quilt add {filepath} 2b. manual edit file(s) use your $editor 3. update the patch: quilt refresh 3b. list the patch description: quilt header [patch] 3c. update the patch description: quilt header -e [patch] 4. list files in the patch: quilt files 5. show current patch contents: quilt diff 6. apply current, ready for next: quilt push 7. remove file(s) from patch: quilt remove {filepath} Importing patches: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1. import a patch: quilt import patchfile 2. apply it: quilt push 3. update the patch: quilt refresh 3b. list the patch description: quilt header [patch] 3c. update the patch description: quilt header -e [patch] 4. list files in the patch: quilt files 5. show current patch contents: quilt diff Import/Apply a series file + patches to a tree: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1. cp(1) the patches directory ('series' file + all patch files) to the expected patches location (as specified in your .quiltrc file) 2. apply all of series: quilt push -a Other patch management: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1. remove files from a patch: quilt remove {filepath} 2. remove unapplied patch: quilt delete {patchname} 3. list all patch names: quilt series 4. list all applied/unapplied: quilt applied | unapplied 5. list top/previous/next patch name: quilt top | previous | next 6. list patches modifying file: quilt patches {filepath} 7. rename a patch: quilt rename {patchname} 8. duplicate a patch: quilt fork {patchname} 9. prepare or send mails: quilt mail ... 10. search in source files: quilt grep ... 11. create snapshot: quilt snapshot 12. init from RPM spec or series file: quilt setup 13. distribution of patches: quilt diff --combine and distribute the combined diff file, or distribute the patches/ directory content Helper files/scripts ==================== backup-files A simple utility that creates / restores / removes backup files. dependency-graph A utility to compute patch dependencies from the QUILT_PC metadata. edmail A utility to manipulate the headers of an Internet mail message. guards Convert a series file with conditional statements into a series file as expected; see the guards(1) manual page. inspect A script to create a series file from an rpm spec file (including a list of tar files). patchfns utilfns Collections of functions. remove-trailing-ws A utility to report trailing whitespace, and remove trailing whitespace from files.