Provided by: hwloc_1.8-1ubuntu1.14.04.1_amd64
NAME
hwloc-patch - Apply a topology difference to an existing XML topology
SYNOPSIS
hwloc-patch [options] [<topology.xml> | refname] [<diff.xml> | -] <output.xml> hwloc-patch [options] [<topology.xml> | refname] [<diff.xml> | -]
OPTIONS
-R --reverse Reverse the sense the difference file. --version Report version and exit.
DESCRIPTION
hwloc-patch loads the difference between two topologies from a XML file (or from the standard input) and applies it to an existing topology, generating a new, modified one. The XML difference may have been computed earlier with hwloc-diff or hwloc-compress-dir. If <output.xml> is given, the new, modified topology is stored in that new file. Otherwise, <topology.xml> is modified in place. If refname is given instead of <topology.xml>, the input topology filename is automatically guessed by reading the refname field of the XML diff file. By default hwloc-diff generates XML diffs with the right reference topology filename (without any path prefix). If - is given instead of <diff.xml>, the topology difference is read from the standard input. NOTE: It is highly recommended that you read the hwloc(7) overview page before reading this man page. Most of the concepts described in hwloc(7) directly apply to the hwloc- patch utility.
EXAMPLES
hwloc-patch's operation is best described through several examples. Apply a XML topology difference file to an existing topology: $ hwloc-patch fourmi023.xml diff.xml fourmi023-new.xml Apply a XML topology difference file whole refname field contains the right input topology: $ hwloc-patch refname diff.xml fourmi023-new.xml Apply a XML topology from the standard intput: $ cat diff.xml | hwloc-patch fourmi023.xml - fourmi023-new.xml Directly compute the difference between two topologies and apply it to another one, in place: $ hwloc-diff fourmi023.xml fourmi024.xml | hwloc-patch fourmi025.xml -
RETURN VALUE
Upon successful execution, hwloc-patch outputs the modified topology. The return value is 0. hwloc-patch also returns nonzero if any kind of error occurs, such as (but not limited to) failure to parse the command line.
SEE ALSO
hwloc(7), lstopo(1), hwloc-diff(1), hwloc-compress-dir(1)