From b74d6e19637b2a533fa10d4a51a8164805fe8875 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Martin Quinson Date: Wed, 25 Feb 2004 18:37:29 +0000 Subject: Add the man page in the debian package directly in order to not bump to 0.31 for that only --- debian/quilt.1 | 415 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ debian/quilt.install | 1 + 2 files changed, 416 insertions(+) create mode 100644 debian/quilt.1 diff --git a/debian/quilt.1 b/debian/quilt.1 new file mode 100644 index 0000000..253b2de --- /dev/null +++ b/debian/quilt.1 @@ -0,0 +1,415 @@ +."Created by Martin Quinson from the tex documentation +." +.TH quilt 1 "February 21, 2004" "quilt" + +.SH NAME +quilt - tool to manage series of patches + +.SH SYNOPSIS +.B quilt +[-h] command [options] + +.SH DESCRIPTION +Quilt is a tool to manage large sets of patches by keeping track of the +changes each patch makes. Patches can be applied, un-applied, refreshed, +etc. The key philosophical concept is that your primary output is patches. + +With quilt, all work occurs within a single directory tree. Commands can be +be invoqued from anywhere within the source tree. They are of the form +.B quilt cmd +similar to CVS commands. They can be abbreviated as long as the specified +part of the command is unique. All commands print some help text with +.B quilt cmd -h. + +Quilt manages a stack of patches. Patches are applied incrementally on top +of the base tree plus all preceding patches. They can be pushed on top of +the stack +.RB ( "quilt push" ), +and popped off the stack +.RB ( "quilt pop" ). +Commands are available for querying the contents of the series file +.RB ( "quilt series" , +see below), the contents of the stack +.RB ( "quilt applied" , " quilt previous" , " quilt top" ), +and the patches that are not applied at a particular moment +.RB ( "quilt next" , " quilt unapplied" ). +By default, most commands apply to the topmost patch on the stack. + +Patch files are located in the +.I patches +sub-directory of the source tree (see EXAMPLE OF WORKING TREE below). The +.I QUILT_PATCHES +environment variable can be used to override this location. The +.I patches +directory may contain sub-directories. It may also be a symbolic link +instead of a directory. + +A file called +.I series +contains a list of patch file names that defines the order in which patches +are applied. Unless there are means by which series files can be generated +automatically, it is usually provided along with a set of patches. In this +file, each patch file name is on a separate line. Patch files are identified +by pathnames that are relative to the +.I patches +directory; patches may be in sub-directories below the this directory. Lines +in the series file that start with a hash character (#) are ignored. When +quilt adds, removes, or renames patches, it automatically updates the series +file. Users of quilt can modify series files while some patches are +applied, as long as the applied patches remain in their original order. + +Different series files can be used to assemble patches in different ways, +corresponding for example to different development branches. + +Before a patch is applied (or ``pushed on the stack''), copies of all files +the patch modifies are saved to the +.RI .pc/ patch +directory. The patch is added to the list of currently applied patches +(.pc/applied-patches). Later when a patch is regenerated +.RB ( "quilt refresh" ), +the backup copies in +.RI .pc/ patch +are compared with the current versions of the files in the source tree using +GNU diff. + +Documentation related to a patch can be put at the beginning of a patch +file. Quilt is careful to preserve all text that precedes the actual patch +when doing a refresh. (This is limited to patches in unified format; see +.B diff +documentation). + +The series file is looked up in the root of the source tree, in the patches +directory, and in the .pc directory. The first series file that is found is +used. This may also be a symbolic link, or a file with multiple hard links. +Usually, only one series file is used for a set of patches, so the +patches sub-directory is a convenient location. + +The .pc directory and its sub-directories cannot be relocated, but it can be +a symbolic link. While patches are applied to the source tree, this +directory is essential for many operations, including taking patches off the +stack +.RB ( "quilt pop" ), +and refreshing patches +.RB ( "quilt refresh" ). +Files in the textsf{.pc} directory are automatically removed when they are +no longer needed, so there is no need to clean up manually. + +.SH QUILT COMMANDS REFERENCE + +.IP "\fBadd\fP [-p patch] {file} ... " 4 + + +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 on top of the specified patch cannot be added. + +.IP " -p patch" 8 +Patch to add files to. + +.IP "\fBapplied\fP [-n] [patch] " 4 + + +Print a list of applied patches, or all patches up to and including the +specified patch in the file series. + +.IP " -n" 8 +Print patch file names instead of patch names. + +.IP "\fBdelete\fP [patch] " 4 + + +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.) + +.IP "\fBdiff\fP [-p n] [-c patch|-z] [-R] [-P patch] [--diff=utility] [file ...] " 4 + + +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. + +.IP " -p n" 8 +Create a -p n style patch (-p0 or -p1 are supported). + +.IP " -P patch" 8 +Create a diff for the specified patch. (Defaults to the topmost +patch.) + +.IP " -c patch" 8 +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. + +.IP " -R" 8 +Create a reverse diff. + +.IP " -z" 8 +Write to standard output the changes that have been made +relative to the topmost or specified patch. + +.IP " --diff=utility" 8 +Use the specified utility for generating the diff. The utility +is invoked with the original and new file name as arguments. + +.IP "\fBfiles\fP [-v] [patch] " 4 + + +Print the list of files that the topmost or specified patch changes. + +.IP " -v" 8 +Verbose, more user friendly output. + +.IP "\fBimport\fP [-f] [-p num] [-n patch] [patchfile] " 4 + + +Import an external patch. If a patch file name is specified, the patch +will be stored in this relative path in the patches/ directory. Else, +if an input file name is given this name is used as the patch name. + +.IP " -p num" 8 +Number of directory levels to strip when aplying (default=1) + +.IP " -n patch" 8 +File name relative to patches/ to use. + +.IP " -f" 8 +Overwite/update existing patches. + +.IP "\fBnew\fP {patchname} " 4 + + +Create a new patch with the specified file name, and insert it after the +topmost patch in the patch series file. + +.IP "\fBnext\fP [patch] " 4 + + +Print the name of the next patch after the specified or topmost patch in +the series file. + +.IP " -n" 8 +Print patch file names instead of patch names. + +.IP "\fBpatches\fP {file} " 4 + + +Print the list of patches that modify the specified file. (Uses a +heuristic to determine which files are modified by unapplied patches. +Note that this heuristic is much slower than scanning applied patches.) + +.IP " -n" 8 +Print the patch file names instead of the patch names. + +.IP " -v" 8 +Verbose, more user friendly output. + +.IP "\fBpop\fP [-afRqv] [num|patch] " 4 + + +Remove patch(es) from the current stack. A number of patches to remove, +or a patch name can be specified. If a patch name is given, remove all +patches applied on top of the named patch. If neither a number nor a +patch name is specified, remove the next patch from the series file. + +.IP " -a" 8 +Remove all applied patches. + +.IP " -f" 8 +Force remove. The state before the patch(es) were applied will +be restored from backup files. + +.IP " -R" 8 +Remove the patch with `patch -R' and check if the patch reverts +all changes properly. + +.IP " -q" 8 +Quiet operation. + +.IP " -v" 8 +Verbose operation. + +.IP "\fBprevious\fP [-n] [patch] " 4 + + +Print the name of the previous patch before the specified or topmost +patch in the series file. + +.IP " -n" 8 +Print patch file names instead of patch names. + +.IP "\fBpush\fP [-afqv] [--leave-rejects] [num|patch] " 4 + + +Apply patch(es) from the series file. A number of patches to apply, or +a patch name can be specified. If a patch name is given, apply all +patches up to and including the named patch. If neither a number nor a +patch name is specified, apply the next patch from the series file. + +.IP " -a" 8 +Apply all patches in the series file. + +.IP " -f" 8 +Force apply, even if the patch has rejects. + +.IP " -q" 8 +Quiet operation. + +.IP " -v" 8 +Verbose operation. + +.IP " --leave-rejects" 8 +Leave around the reject files patch produced, even if the patch +is not actually applied. + +.IP " --interactive" 8 +Allow the patch utility to ask how to deal with conflicts. If +this option is not given, the option -f will be passed to the +patch program. + +.IP "\fBrefresh\fP [-p n] [-f] [patch] " 4 + + +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. + +.IP " -p n" 8 +Create a -p n style patch (-p0 or -p1 supported). + +.IP " -f" 8 +Force refresh, even if more recent patches modify +some of the same files. + +.IP "\fBremove\fP [-p patch] {file} ... " 4 + + +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. + +.IP " -p patch" 8 +Patch to remove files from. + +.IP "\fBseries\fP [-v] " 4 + + +Print the names of all patches in the series file. + +.IP " -n" 8 +Print patch file names instead patch names. + +.IP " -v" 8 +Verbose, more user friendly output. + +.IP "\fBsetup\fP [-d sourcedir] {seriesfile|specfile} " 4 + + +Initializes a source tree from a patch series file. The patch series +file must contain the name of the relevant tar archive, in addition to +the list of patches. + +.IP " -d" 8 +The directory that contains the archives and patches. Defaults +to the directory of the series/spec file. + +.IP " -l" 8 +Make the patches directory a symbolic link. If a series file is +specified, also create a symlink to the series file. + +.IP "\fBtop\fP " 4 + + +Print the name of the topmost patch on the current stack of applied +patches. + +.IP "\fBunapplied\fP [patch] " 4 + + +Print a list of patches that are not applied, or all patches that follow +the specified patch in the series file. + +.IP " -n" 8 +Print patch file names instead of patch names. + +.IP "\fBfold\fP [-p strip-level] " 4 + + +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). + +.IP " -p strip-level" 8 +The number of pathname components to strip from file names +when applying patchfile. + +.IP "\fBfork\fP [new_name] " 4 + + +Fork the next patch. 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). + +.IP "\fBsnapshot\fP [-d] " 4 + + +Take a snapshot of the current working state. + +.IP " -d" 8 +Remove current snapshot. + +.IP "\fBedit\fP file ... " 4 + + +Edit the specified file(s) in vi after adding it (them) to the +topmost patch. + + +.SH EXAMPLE OF WORKING TREE + +.nf ++- work/ -+- ... +| |- patches/ -+- series +| | |- patch2.diff +| | |- patch1.diff +| | +- ... +| +- .pc/ -+- applied-patches +| |- patch1/ -+- ... +| |- patch2/ -+- ... +| +- ... +.fi + +.SH EXAMPLE + +Please refere to the pdf documentation for an example. + +.SH FILES + +.IP ~/.quiltrc 4 +Configuration (see pdf documentation for more details). + +.SH AUTHORS + +Quilt started as a series of scripts written by Andrew Morton +(patch-scripts). Based on Andrew's ideas, Andreas Gruenbacher completely +rewrote the scripts, with the help of several other contributors (see +AUTHORS file in the distribution). + +This man page was written by Martin Quinson, based on information found in +the pdf documentation, and in the help messages of each commands. + +.SH SEE ALSO + +The pdf documentation, which should be under /usr/share/doc/quilt/quilt.pdf. + +.BR diff ( 1 ), +.BR patch ( 1 ) diff --git a/debian/quilt.install b/debian/quilt.install index ce3f002..e71de2b 100644 --- a/debian/quilt.install +++ b/debian/quilt.install @@ -6,3 +6,4 @@ usr/share/locale/* usr/share/man/* usr/share/quilt/* ../patchsys-quilt.mk /usr/share/cdbs/1/rules/ +../quilt.1 usr/share/man/man1/ -- cgit