Provided by: patcher_0.0.20040521-6.1_all bug

NAME

       patcher - a patch maintenance tool

SYNOPSIS

       patcher [-n <patchname>] [<file ...>]
                           Edit <file> as part of the patch <patchname>.

       patcher -r          Refresh current patch.

       patcher [-f] -b     Move back one patch to the previous one.

       patcher [-f] -b <patch>
                           Move back in series until we're at <patch>.

       patcher [-f] -b <num>
                           Move back <num> patches in series.

       patcher -a          Apply the next patch in the series.

       patcher -a <patch>  Apply all patches from the series until we've reached at <patch>.

       patcher -a <num>    Apply next <num> patches from series.

       patcher -n <patchname> [-p <n>] -i <diff>
                           Import  an  external  diff  file  into  patch  <patchname>. Strip <n> levels from the
                           directory names. Please note that patch allows '-p1', but we only '-p 1'.

       patcher [-f] [-n <patchname>] [-p <n>] -i <patch ...>
                           Import an external diff file into  patch  <patchname>.  Strip  <n>  levels  from  the
                           directory names. Please note that patch allows '-p1', but we only '-p 1'.

CONCEPT

       Patcher is a perl script which I use for managing patches.  It's quite powerful, easy to use, and fast.

       Patcher  keeps  track  of which files you change. It then can generate patches from your changes, no need
       for you to handle the diff tool manually.

       You can have more than one record of file changes, we call this a patch.  A patch is something  that  the
       patch(1) command can apply.

       The  patches  can  be stacked in series, they define the order they have to applied. Patcher keeps series
       information as well as information which patches have been applied and which not.

DESCRIPTION

       Later we will have a walkthrought, but let me first explain the basic operation modes of patcher:

       Editing files

       When you call patcher with a filename, patch will make a backup of this file (if the file  exists).   Now
       you  can  create  or  change  the  file. Later you can ask patcher to create a unified diff with all your
       changes.

       Creating unified diffs

       Just call "patcher -r" and you will get a unified diff of all your additions, modification and deletions.
       The diff will be stored in .patches/<patchname>.patch. It is in a form that allows direct application via
       patch(1) or, of course, via "patcher -i".

       Whenever you do "patcher -r" your .patches/<patchname>.patch file get's refreshed.

       Back out a patch

       To revoke your changes and go to the previous version, just enter "patcher -b". Patcher  will  make  sure
       that  you don't loose your changes by asking you to create a diff if something has changed since the last
       refresh. You may use -f (or --force) patcher to go back anyway.

       You can back out more than one patch by either specifying a number a patch name after -b.

       Re-Apply a patch

       With "patcher -n <patchname> -a" one can apply an already existing managed patch. A managed  patch  is  a
       patch  that  already  is  stored  in the .patches directory and is mentioned in the .patches/series file.
       Patcher tests if the patch would apply without problem and applies it. If the patch  would  be  rejected,
       you can use -f (or --force) to apply the patch anyway.

       You can apply more than one patch by either specifying a number a patch name after -a.

       Importing external patches

       Sometimes  you have an external patch. That's the opposite of a managed patch, the patch is not stored in
       the .patches directory. By importing it, it will become a managed patch.

       Import the patch simply with -i <filename>. You can use -p <num> to specify the directory level,  similar
       to  the  -p<num>  option  of  patch(1).  But  please keep in mind that we need a space between -p and the
       number.

       Normally only clean patches will be imported. To import a patch that creates rejects use -f (or --force).
       You'll see a list of files where the patch did not apply cleanly, fix the problems manually.

       Later you can use "patcher -r" to create a clean patch.

INSTALLATION

       Just place patcher somewhere in your path. That's all.

       For each project Patcher requires one  special directory called ".patches".   It  will  search  for  this
       directory. If it does not exist, patcher creates it automatically.

INTERNALS

       All  work  occurs  with  a  single  directory tree. All commands are invoked within the root of that tree
       (TODO: this can and should change). Patcher manages a "stack" of patches.

       Each patch is a changeset against the base tree plus the preceding patches.

       All patches are listed, in order, in the file ".patches/series". Patcher adds patches into this file, but
       never deletes entries. You can edit this file with a text editor, but please do only so if the patch  you
       delete is currently not applied.

       Any  currently  applied  patches  is listed in the file ".patches/applied". The patcher manage this file,
       there is no need for you to ever edit this file manually.

       Each patch affects a number of files  in  the  tree.  These  files  are  listed  in  a  file  list  named
       ".patches/*.files". Patcher manages them. When you back out a patch, this file will deleted. Or, in other
       words, this file exists only for applied patches. It's only used by "patcher -r".

       Patches  are  placed into ".patches/*.patch" files. They are always unified diffs with -p1 as patchlevel.
       You can copy then anywhere, the patch(1) utility will read them without problems.

       Optionally you can put descriptions for the patches in files named ".patches/*.txt".

       So for a particular patch "my-first-patch" the following will exist:

       -   An entry "my-first-patch.patch" in ".patches/series".

       -   An entry "my-first-patch" in ".patches/applied" (if it's currently applied)

       -   A file ".patches/my-first-patch.files" which contains the names of  the  files  which  my-first-patch
           modifies, adds or removes

       -   A  file  ".patches/my-first-patch.patch",  which  is  the  context diff, basically the main output of
           patcher.

       -   Optionally a file ".patches/my-first-patch.txt" which contains the patch's changelog, description  or
           whatever you put in there.

WALKTHROUGHT

       Let's start.

       Go into /usr/src/linux (or wherever).

       Now let's start with changing some source files:

               patcher -n my-patch kernel/sched.c

       OK,  patcher  copied  kernel/sched.c  to  kernel/sched.c~my-patch for you, the program has also done some
       magic in the .patches directory, which won't be of interest to us now.

               Now edit kernel/sched.c a bit.

       Now we're ready to document the patch:

               Create .patches/my-patch.txt

       Now generate a patch:

               patcher -r

       This will generate ".patches/my-patch.patch". Take a look at this file.

       Now we remove our change to sched.c by going backwards:

               patcher -b

       Look at where we're now:

               patcher -s

       Now let's add another file to my-patch. First we re-apply the patch:

               patcher -a

       Now edit a second file:

               patcher kernel/printk.c

       Note that here we gave patcher a single argument,  without  command  line  options.   This  always  tells
       patcher to add another file to the current patch.

               Edit kernel/printk.c

       Refresh my-patch:

               patcher -r

       Now start a second patch:

               patcher -n my-second-patch kernel/sched.c

       Here  we have a filename in the command line for patcher, so we edit a file. But now we specified a patch
       name with -n. This told patcher to create a new patch.  Now patcher manages two patches,  "my-patch"  and
       "my-second-patch".

               Edit kernel/sched.c, to make some changes for my-second-patch

       Generate my-second-patch:

               patcher -r

       Take a look in ".patches/my-second-patch.patch".

       Also  note that "my-second-patch.patch" has been added to the series file.  Whenever you manually begin a
       patch, it will automatically be put into the series file.

       In this way, the whole thing is stackable. If you have four patches applied,  say  "patch-1",  "patch-2",
       "patch-3" and "patch-4", and if patch-2 and patch-4 both touch kernel/sched.c then you will have:

       kernel/sched.c~patch-2        Original copy, before patch-2

       kernel/sched.c~patch-4        Copy before patch-4. Contains changes from patch-2

       kernel/sched.c                Current working copy. Contains changes from patch-4.

       This means that your diff headers contain "~patch-name" in them, which is convenient documentation.

       To end our tour, we remove both patches:

               patcher -b
               patcher -b

       That's pretty much it, really.

SEE ALSO

       Andrew Morton's patch scripts at http://www.zip.com.au/~akpm/linux/patches/

       I stole the idea from him and even most of this documentation.

       At  http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/quilt/  you'll  find  Quilt.  That's  the  successor  of Andrew's
       original scripts. They do the same as patcher (and slightly more), but with tenthousand shell scripts.

AUTHOR

       Holger Schurig <holgerschurig usingthedomain gmx.de>

perl v5.8.4                                        2004-05-21                                         PATCHER(1)