[9] | 1 | .\" -*- nroff -*-
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| 2 | .rn '' }`
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| 3 | '\" $Header: /cvsup/minix/src/man/man1/patch.1,v 1.1 2005/05/02 13:01:39 beng Exp $
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| 4 | '\"
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| 5 | '\" $Log: patch.1,v $
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| 6 | '\" Revision 1.1 2005/05/02 13:01:39 beng
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| 7 | '\" Added man pages.
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| 8 | '\"
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| 9 | '\" Revision 2.0.1.2 88/06/22 20:47:18 lwall
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| 10 | '\" patch12: now avoids Bell System Logo
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| 11 | '\"
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| 12 | '\" Revision 2.0.1.1 88/06/03 15:12:51 lwall
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| 13 | '\" patch10: -B switch was contributed.
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| 14 | '\"
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| 15 | '\" Revision 2.0 86/09/17 15:39:09 lwall
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| 16 | '\" Baseline for netwide release.
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| 17 | '\"
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| 18 | '\" Revision 1.4 86/08/01 19:23:22 lwall
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| 19 | '\" Documented -v, -p, -F.
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| 20 | '\" Added notes to patch senders.
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| 21 | '\"
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| 22 | '\" Revision 1.3 85/03/26 15:11:06 lwall
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| 23 | '\" Frozen.
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| 24 | '\"
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| 25 | '\" Revision 1.2.1.4 85/03/12 16:14:27 lwall
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| 26 | '\" Documented -p.
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| 27 | '\"
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| 28 | '\" Revision 1.2.1.3 85/03/12 16:09:41 lwall
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| 29 | '\" Documented -D.
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| 30 | '\"
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| 31 | '\" Revision 1.2.1.2 84/12/05 11:06:55 lwall
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| 32 | '\" Added -l switch, and noted bistability bug.
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| 33 | '\"
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| 34 | '\" Revision 1.2.1.1 84/12/04 17:23:39 lwall
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| 35 | '\" Branch for sdcrdcf changes.
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| 36 | '\"
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| 37 | '\" Revision 1.2 84/12/04 17:22:02 lwall
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| 38 | '\" Baseline version.
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| 39 | '\"
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| 40 | .de Sh
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| 41 | .br
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| 42 | .ne 5
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| 43 | .PP
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| 44 | \fB\\$1\fR
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| 45 | .PP
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| 46 | ..
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| 47 | .de Sp
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| 48 | .if t .sp .5v
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| 49 | .if n .sp
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| 50 | ..
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| 51 | '\"
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| 52 | '\" Set up \*(-- to give an unbreakable dash;
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| 53 | '\" string Tr holds user defined translation string.
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| 54 | '\" Bell System Logo is used as a dummy character.
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| 55 | '\"
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| 56 | '\" Shut up a groff -ww warning.
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| 57 | '\".if \n(.g .if !dTr .ds Tr
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| 58 | '\".ie n \{\
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| 59 | .tr \(*W-\*(Tr
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| 60 | '\".ds -- \(*W-
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| 61 | '\".if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=24u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-12u'-\" diablo 10 pitch
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| 62 | '\".if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=20u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-8u'-\" diablo 12 pitch
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| 63 | .ds L" ""
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| 64 | .ds R" ""
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| 65 | .ds L' '
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| 66 | .ds R' '
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| 67 | '\"'br \}
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| 68 | '\".el \{\
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| 69 | .ds -- \(em\|
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| 70 | .tr \*(Tr
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| 71 | .ds L" ``
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| 72 | .ds R" ''
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| 73 | .ds L' `
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| 74 | .ds R' '
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| 75 | '\"'br\}
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| 76 | .TH PATCH 1 LOCAL
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| 77 | .SH NAME
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| 78 | patch - apply a diff file to an original
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| 79 | .SH SYNOPSIS
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| 80 | .B patch
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| 81 | [options] [origfile [patchfile]] [+ [options] [origfile]]...
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| 82 | .sp
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| 83 | but usually just
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| 84 | .sp
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| 85 | .B patch
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| 86 | <patchfile
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| 87 | .SH DESCRIPTION
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| 88 | .I Patch
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| 89 | will take a patch file containing any of the four forms of difference
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| 90 | listing produced by the
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| 91 | .I diff
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| 92 | program and apply those differences to an original file, producing a patched
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| 93 | version.
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| 94 | By default, the patched version is put in place of the original, with
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| 95 | the original file backed up to the same name with the
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| 96 | extension \*(L".orig\*(R" (\*(L"~\*(R" on systems that do not
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| 97 | support long filenames), or as specified by the
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| 98 | .BR -b ,
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| 99 | .BR -B ,
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| 100 | or
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| 101 | .B -V
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| 102 | switches.
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| 103 | The extension used for making backup files may also be specified in the
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| 104 | .B SIMPLE_BACKUP_SUFFIX
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| 105 | environment variable, which is overridden by above switches.
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| 106 | .PP
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| 107 | If the backup file already exists,
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| 108 | .B patch
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| 109 | creates a new backup file name by changing the first lowercase letter
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| 110 | in the last component of the file's name into uppercase. If there are
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| 111 | no more lowercase letters in the name, it removes the first character
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| 112 | from the name. It repeats this process until it comes up with a
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| 113 | backup file that does not already exist.
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| 114 | .PP
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| 115 | You may also specify where you want the output to go with a
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| 116 | .B -o
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| 117 | switch; if that file already exists, it is backed up first.
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| 118 | .PP
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| 119 | If
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| 120 | .I patchfile
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| 121 | is omitted, or is a hyphen, the patch will be read from standard input.
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| 122 | .PP
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| 123 | Upon startup, patch will attempt to determine the type of the diff listing,
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| 124 | unless over-ruled by a
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| 125 | .BR -c ,
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| 126 | .BR -e ,
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| 127 | .BR -n ,
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| 128 | or
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| 129 | .B -u
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| 130 | switch.
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| 131 | Context diffs (old-style, new-style, and unified) and
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| 132 | normal diffs are applied by the
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| 133 | .I patch
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| 134 | program itself, while ed diffs are simply fed to the
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| 135 | .I ed
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| 136 | editor via a pipe.
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| 137 | .PP
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| 138 | .I Patch
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| 139 | will try to skip any leading garbage, apply the diff,
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| 140 | and then skip any trailing garbage.
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| 141 | Thus you could feed an article or message containing a
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| 142 | diff listing to
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| 143 | .IR patch ,
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| 144 | and it should work.
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| 145 | If the entire diff is indented by a consistent amount,
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| 146 | this will be taken into account.
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| 147 | .PP
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| 148 | With context diffs, and to a lesser extent with normal diffs,
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| 149 | .I patch
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| 150 | can detect when the line numbers mentioned in the patch are incorrect,
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| 151 | and will attempt to find the correct place to apply each hunk of the patch.
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| 152 | As a first guess, it takes the line number mentioned for the hunk, plus or
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| 153 | minus any offset used in applying the previous hunk.
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| 154 | If that is not the correct place,
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| 155 | .I patch
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| 156 | will scan both forwards and backwards for a set of lines matching the context
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| 157 | given in the hunk.
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| 158 | First
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| 159 | .I patch
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| 160 | looks for a place where all lines of the context match.
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| 161 | If no such place is found, and it's a context diff, and the maximum fuzz factor
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| 162 | is set to 1 or more, then another scan takes place ignoring the first and last
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| 163 | line of context.
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| 164 | If that fails, and the maximum fuzz factor is set to 2 or more,
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| 165 | the first two and last two lines of context are ignored,
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| 166 | and another scan is made.
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| 167 | (The default maximum fuzz factor is 2.)
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| 168 | If
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| 169 | .I patch
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| 170 | cannot find a place to install that hunk of the patch, it will put the
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| 171 | hunk out to a reject file, which normally is the name of the output file
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| 172 | plus \*(L".rej\*(R" (\*(L"#\*(R" on systems that do not support
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| 173 | long filenames).
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| 174 | (Note that the rejected hunk will come out in context diff form whether the
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| 175 | input patch was a context diff or a normal diff.
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| 176 | If the input was a normal diff, many of the contexts will simply be null.)
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| 177 | The line numbers on the hunks in the reject file may be different than
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| 178 | in the patch file: they reflect the approximate location patch thinks the
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| 179 | failed hunks belong in the new file rather than the old one.
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| 180 | .PP
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| 181 | As each hunk is completed, you will be told whether the hunk succeeded or
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| 182 | failed, and which line (in the new file)
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| 183 | .I patch
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| 184 | thought the hunk should go on.
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| 185 | If this is different from the line number specified in the diff you will
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| 186 | be told the offset.
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| 187 | A single large offset MAY be an indication that a hunk was installed in the
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| 188 | wrong place.
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| 189 | You will also be told if a fuzz factor was used to make the match, in which
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| 190 | case you should also be slightly suspicious.
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| 191 | .PP
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| 192 | If no original file is specified on the command line,
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| 193 | .I patch
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| 194 | will try to figure out from the leading garbage what the name of the file
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| 195 | to edit is.
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| 196 | In the header of a context diff, the filename is found from lines beginning
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| 197 | with \*(L"***\*(R" or \*(L"---\*(R", with the shortest name of an existing
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| 198 | file winning.
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| 199 | Only context diffs have lines like that, but if there is an \*(L"Index:\*(R"
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| 200 | line in the leading garbage,
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| 201 | .I patch
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| 202 | will try to use the filename from that line.
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| 203 | The context diff header takes precedence over an Index line.
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| 204 | If no filename can be intuited from the leading garbage, you will be asked
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| 205 | for the name of the file to patch.
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| 206 | .PP
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| 207 | If the original file cannot be found or is read-only, but a suitable
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| 208 | SCCS or RCS file is handy,
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| 209 | .I patch
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| 210 | will attempt to get or check out the file.
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| 211 | .PP
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| 212 | Additionally, if the leading garbage contains a \*(L"Prereq: \*(R" line,
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| 213 | .I patch
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| 214 | will take the first word from the prerequisites line (normally a version
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| 215 | number) and check the input file to see if that word can be found.
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| 216 | If not,
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| 217 | .I patch
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| 218 | will ask for confirmation before proceeding.
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| 219 | .PP
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| 220 | The upshot of all this is that you should be able to say, while in a news
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| 221 | interface, the following:
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| 222 | .Sp
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| 223 | | patch -d /usr/src/local/blurfl
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| 224 | .Sp
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| 225 | and patch a file in the blurfl directory directly from the article containing
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| 226 | the patch.
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| 227 | .PP
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| 228 | If the patch file contains more than one patch,
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| 229 | .I patch
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| 230 | will try to apply each of them as if they came from separate patch files.
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| 231 | This means, among other things, that it is assumed that the name of the file
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| 232 | to patch must be determined for each diff listing,
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| 233 | and that the garbage before each diff listing will
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| 234 | be examined for interesting things such as filenames and revision level, as
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| 235 | mentioned previously.
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| 236 | You can give switches (and another original file name) for the second and
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| 237 | subsequent patches by separating the corresponding argument lists
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| 238 | by a \*(L'+\*(R'.
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| 239 | (The argument list for a second or subsequent patch may not specify a new
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| 240 | patch file, however.)
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| 241 | .PP
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| 242 | .I Patch
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| 243 | recognizes the following switches:
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| 244 | .TP 5
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| 245 | .B \-b
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| 246 | causes the next argument to be interpreted as the backup extension, to be
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| 247 | used in place of \*(L".orig\*(R" or \*(L"~\*(R".
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| 248 | .TP 5
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| 249 | .B \-B
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| 250 | causes the next argument to be interpreted as a prefix to the backup file
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| 251 | name. If this argument is specified any argument from -b will be ignored.
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| 252 | .TP 5
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| 253 | .B \-c
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| 254 | forces
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| 255 | .I patch
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| 256 | to interpret the patch file as a context diff.
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| 257 | .TP 5
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| 258 | .B \-d
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| 259 | causes
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| 260 | .I patch
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| 261 | to interpret the next argument as a directory, and cd to it before doing
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| 262 | anything else.
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| 263 | .TP 5
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| 264 | .B \-D
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| 265 | causes
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| 266 | .I patch
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| 267 | to use the "#ifdef...#endif" construct to mark changes.
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| 268 | The argument following will be used as the differentiating symbol.
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| 269 | Note that, unlike the C compiler, there must be a space between the
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| 270 | .B \-D
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| 271 | and the argument.
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| 272 | .TP 5
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| 273 | .B \-e
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| 274 | forces
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| 275 | .I patch
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| 276 | to interpret the patch file as an ed script.
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| 277 | .TP 5
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| 278 | .B \-E
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| 279 | causes
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| 280 | .I patch
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| 281 | to remove output files that are empty after the patches have been applied.
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| 282 | .TP 5
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| 283 | .B \-f
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| 284 | forces
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| 285 | .I patch
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| 286 | to assume that the user knows exactly what he or she is doing, and to not
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| 287 | ask any questions. It assumes the following: skip patches for which a
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| 288 | file to patch can't be found; patch files even though they have the
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| 289 | wrong version for the ``Prereq:'' line in the patch; and assume that
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| 290 | patches are not reversed even if they look like they are.
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| 291 | This option does not suppress commentary; use
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| 292 | .B \-s
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| 293 | for that.
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| 294 | .TP 5
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| 295 | .B \-t
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| 296 | similar to
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| 297 | .BR \-f ,
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| 298 | in that it suppresses questions, but makes some different assumptions:
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| 299 | skip patches for which a file to patch can't be found (the same as \fB\-f\fP);
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| 300 | skip patches for which the file has the wrong version for the ``Prereq:'' line
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| 301 | in the patch; and assume that patches are reversed if they look like
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| 302 | they are.
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| 303 | .TP 5
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| 304 | .B \-F<number>
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| 305 | sets the maximum fuzz factor.
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| 306 | This switch only applies to context diffs, and causes
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| 307 | .I patch
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| 308 | to ignore up to that many lines in looking for places to install a hunk.
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| 309 | Note that a larger fuzz factor increases the odds of a faulty patch.
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| 310 | The default fuzz factor is 2, and it may not be set to more than
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| 311 | the number of lines of context in the context diff, ordinarily 3.
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| 312 | .TP 5
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| 313 | .B \-l
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| 314 | causes the pattern matching to be done loosely, in case the tabs and
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| 315 | spaces have been munged in your input file.
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| 316 | Any sequence of whitespace in the pattern line will match any sequence
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| 317 | in the input file.
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| 318 | Normal characters must still match exactly.
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| 319 | Each line of the context must still match a line in the input file.
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| 320 | .TP 5
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| 321 | .B \-n
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| 322 | forces
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| 323 | .I patch
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| 324 | to interpret the patch file as a normal diff.
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| 325 | .TP 5
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| 326 | .B \-N
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| 327 | causes
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| 328 | .I patch
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| 329 | to ignore patches that it thinks are reversed or already applied.
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| 330 | See also
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| 331 | .B \-R .
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| 332 | .TP 5
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| 333 | .B \-o
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| 334 | causes the next argument to be interpreted as the output file name.
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| 335 | .TP 5
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| 336 | .B \-p<number>
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| 337 | sets the pathname strip count,
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| 338 | which controls how pathnames found in the patch file are treated, in case
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| 339 | the you keep your files in a different directory than the person who sent
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| 340 | out the patch.
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| 341 | The strip count specifies how many slashes are to be stripped from
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| 342 | the front of the pathname.
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| 343 | (Any intervening directory names also go away.)
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| 344 | For example, supposing the filename in the patch file was
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| 345 | .sp
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| 346 | /u/howard/src/blurfl/blurfl.c
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| 347 | .sp
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| 348 | setting
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| 349 | .B \-p
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| 350 | or
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| 351 | .B \-p0
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| 352 | gives the entire pathname unmodified,
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| 353 | .B \-p1
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| 354 | gives
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| 355 | .sp
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| 356 | u/howard/src/blurfl/blurfl.c
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| 357 | .sp
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| 358 | without the leading slash,
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| 359 | .B \-p4
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| 360 | gives
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| 361 | .sp
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| 362 | blurfl/blurfl.c
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| 363 | .sp
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| 364 | and not specifying
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| 365 | .B \-p
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| 366 | at all just gives you "blurfl.c", unless all of the directories in the
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| 367 | leading path (u/howard/src/blurfl) exist and that path is relative,
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| 368 | in which case you get the entire pathname unmodified.
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| 369 | Whatever you end up with is looked for either in the current directory,
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| 370 | or the directory specified by the
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| 371 | .B \-d
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| 372 | switch.
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| 373 | .TP 5
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| 374 | .B \-r
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| 375 | causes the next argument to be interpreted as the reject file name.
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| 376 | .TP 5
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| 377 | .B \-R
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| 378 | tells
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| 379 | .I patch
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| 380 | that this patch was created with the old and new files swapped.
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| 381 | (Yes, I'm afraid that does happen occasionally, human nature being what it
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| 382 | is.)
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| 383 | .I Patch
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| 384 | will attempt to swap each hunk around before applying it.
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| 385 | Rejects will come out in the swapped format.
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| 386 | The
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| 387 | .B \-R
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| 388 | switch will not work with ed diff scripts because there is too little
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| 389 | information to reconstruct the reverse operation.
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| 390 | .Sp
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| 391 | If the first hunk of a patch fails,
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| 392 | .I patch
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| 393 | will reverse the hunk to see if it can be applied that way.
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| 394 | If it can, you will be asked if you want to have the
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| 395 | .B \-R
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| 396 | switch set.
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| 397 | If it can't, the patch will continue to be applied normally.
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| 398 | (Note: this method cannot detect a reversed patch if it is a normal diff
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| 399 | and if the first command is an append (i.e. it should have been a delete)
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| 400 | since appends always succeed, due to the fact that a null context will match
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| 401 | anywhere.
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| 402 | Luckily, most patches add or change lines rather than delete them, so most
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| 403 | reversed normal diffs will begin with a delete, which will fail, triggering
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| 404 | the heuristic.)
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| 405 | .TP 5
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| 406 | .B \-s
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| 407 | makes
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| 408 | .I patch
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| 409 | do its work silently, unless an error occurs.
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| 410 | .TP 5
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| 411 | .B \-S
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| 412 | causes
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| 413 | .I patch
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| 414 | to ignore this patch from the patch file, but continue on looking
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| 415 | for the next patch in the file.
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| 416 | Thus
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| 417 | .sp
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| 418 | patch -S + -S + <patchfile
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| 419 | .sp
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| 420 | will ignore the first and second of three patches.
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| 421 | .TP 5
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| 422 | .B \-u
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| 423 | forces
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| 424 | .I patch
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| 425 | to interpret the patch file as a unified context diff (a unidiff).
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| 426 | .TP 5
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| 427 | .B \-v
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| 428 | causes
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| 429 | .I patch
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| 430 | to print out its revision header and patch level.
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| 431 | .TP 5
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| 432 | .B \-V
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| 433 | causes the next argument to be interpreted as a method for creating
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| 434 | backup file names. The type of backups made can also be given in the
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| 435 | .B VERSION_CONTROL
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| 436 | environment variable, which is overridden by this option.
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| 437 | The
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| 438 | .B -B
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| 439 | option overrides this option, causing the prefix to always be used for
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| 440 | making backup file names.
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| 441 | The value of the
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| 442 | .B VERSION_CONTROL
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| 443 | environment variable and the argument to the
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| 444 | .B -V
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| 445 | option are like the GNU
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| 446 | Emacs `version-control' variable; they also recognize synonyms that
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| 447 | are more descriptive. The valid values are (unique abbreviations are
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| 448 | accepted):
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| 449 | .RS
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| 450 | .TP
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| 451 | `t' or `numbered'
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| 452 | Always make numbered backups.
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| 453 | .TP
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| 454 | `nil' or `existing'
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| 455 | Make numbered backups of files that already
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| 456 | have them, simple backups of the others.
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| 457 | This is the default.
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| 458 | .TP
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| 459 | `never' or `simple'
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| 460 | Always make simple backups.
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| 461 | .RE
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| 462 | .TP 5
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| 463 | .B \-x<number>
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| 464 | sets internal debugging flags, and is of interest only to
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| 465 | .I patch
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| 466 | patchers.
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| 467 | .SH AUTHOR
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| 468 | Larry Wall <lwall@netlabs.com>
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| 469 | .br
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| 470 | with many other contributors.
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| 471 | .SH ENVIRONMENT
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| 472 | .TP
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| 473 | .B TMPDIR
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| 474 | Directory to put temporary files in; default is /tmp.
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| 475 | .TP
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| 476 | .B SIMPLE_BACKUP_SUFFIX
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| 477 | Extension to use for backup file names instead of \*(L".orig\*(R" or
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| 478 | \*(L"~\*(R".
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| 479 | .TP
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| 480 | .B VERSION_CONTROL
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| 481 | Selects when numbered backup files are made.
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| 482 | .SH FILES
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| 483 | $TMPDIR/patch*
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| 484 | .SH SEE ALSO
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| 485 | diff(1)
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| 486 | .SH NOTES FOR PATCH SENDERS
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| 487 | There are several things you should bear in mind if you are going to
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| 488 | be sending out patches.
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| 489 | First, you can save people a lot of grief by keeping a patchlevel.h file
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| 490 | which is patched to increment the patch level as the first diff in the
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| 491 | patch file you send out.
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| 492 | If you put a Prereq: line in with the patch, it won't let them apply
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| 493 | patches out of order without some warning.
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| 494 | Second, make sure you've specified the filenames right, either in a
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| 495 | context diff header, or with an Index: line.
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| 496 | If you are patching something in a subdirectory, be sure to tell the patch
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| 497 | user to specify a
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| 498 | .B \-p
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| 499 | switch as needed.
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| 500 | Third, you can create a file by sending out a diff that compares a
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| 501 | null file to the file you want to create.
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| 502 | This will only work if the file you want to create doesn't exist already in
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| 503 | the target directory.
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| 504 | Fourth, take care not to send out reversed patches, since it makes people wonder
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| 505 | whether they already applied the patch.
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| 506 | Fifth, while you may be able to get away with putting 582 diff listings into
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| 507 | one file, it is probably wiser to group related patches into separate files in
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| 508 | case something goes haywire.
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| 509 | .SH DIAGNOSTICS
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| 510 | Too many to list here, but generally indicative that
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| 511 | .I patch
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| 512 | couldn't parse your patch file.
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| 513 | .PP
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| 514 | The message \*(L"Hmm...\*(R" indicates that there is unprocessed text in
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| 515 | the patch file and that
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| 516 | .I patch
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| 517 | is attempting to intuit whether there is a patch in that text and, if so,
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| 518 | what kind of patch it is.
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| 519 | .PP
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| 520 | .I Patch
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| 521 | will exit with a non-zero status if any reject files were created.
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| 522 | When applying a set of patches in a loop it behooves you to check this
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| 523 | exit status so you don't apply a later patch to a partially patched file.
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| 524 | .SH CAVEATS
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| 525 | .I Patch
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| 526 | cannot tell if the line numbers are off in an ed script, and can only detect
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| 527 | bad line numbers in a normal diff when it finds a \*(L"change\*(R" or
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| 528 | a \*(L"delete\*(R" command.
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| 529 | A context diff using fuzz factor 3 may have the same problem.
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| 530 | Until a suitable interactive interface is added, you should probably do
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| 531 | a context diff in these cases to see if the changes made sense.
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| 532 | Of course, compiling without errors is a pretty good indication that the patch
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| 533 | worked, but not always.
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| 534 | .PP
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| 535 | .I Patch
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| 536 | usually produces the correct results, even when it has to do a lot of
|
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| 537 | guessing.
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| 538 | However, the results are guaranteed to be correct only when the patch is
|
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| 539 | applied to exactly the same version of the file that the patch was
|
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| 540 | generated from.
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| 541 | .SH BUGS
|
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| 542 | Could be smarter about partial matches, excessively \&deviant offsets and
|
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| 543 | swapped code, but that would take an extra pass.
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| 544 | .PP
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| 545 | If code has been duplicated (for instance with #ifdef OLDCODE ... #else ...
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| 546 | #endif),
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| 547 | .I patch
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| 548 | is incapable of patching both versions, and, if it works at all, will likely
|
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| 549 | patch the wrong one, and tell you that it succeeded to boot.
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| 550 | .PP
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| 551 | If you apply a patch you've already applied,
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| 552 | .I patch
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| 553 | will think it is a reversed patch, and offer to un-apply the patch.
|
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| 554 | This could be construed as a feature.
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| 555 | .rn }` ''
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