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<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>

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	</style>

	<title>
		Libreboot documentation: using diff and patch
	</title>

</head>

<body>

	<header>
		<h1 id="pagetop">Diff and patch</h1>
		<aside>This is just a quick guide for reference, use 'man' to know more.</aside>
	</header>

	<p>
		<a href="index.html">back to index</a>
	</p>

<hr/>

	<h1>
		Apply a patch
	</h1>

	<p class="important">
		To apply a patch to a single file, do that in it's directory:<br/>
		<b>$ patch &lt; foo.patch</b>
	</p>

	<p>
		Assuming that the patch is distributed in unified format identifying
		the file the patch should be applied to, the above will work. Otherwise:<br/>
		<b>$ patch foo.txt &lt; bar.patch</b>
	</p>

	<p>
		You can apply a patch to an entire directory, but note the &quot;p level&quot;.
		What this means is that inside patch files will be the files that you
		intend to patch, identified by path names that might be different
		when the files ane located on your own computer instead of on the computer
		where the patch was created. 'p' level instructs the 'patch' utility to
		ignore parts of the path name to identify the files correctly. Usually a
		p level of 1 will work, so you would use:<br/>
		<b>$ patch -p1 &lt; baz.patch</b>
	</p>

	<p>
		Change to the top level directory before running this. If a patch level
		of 1 cannot identify the files to patch, then inspect the patch file for file names.
		For example:<br/>
		<b>/home/user/do/not/panic/yet.c</b>
	</p>

	<p>
		and you are working in a directory that contains panic/yet.c, use:<br/>
		<b>$ patch -p5 &lt; baz.patch</b>
	</p>

	<p>
		You usually count one up for each path separator (forward slash)
		removed from the beginning of the path, until you are left with a path
		that exists in the current working directory. The count is the p level.
	</p>

	<p>
		Removing a patch using the -R flag<br/>
		<b>$ patch -p5 -R &lt; baz.patch</b>
	</p>

	<p><a href="#pagetop">Back to top of page.</a></p>

<hr/>

	<h1>
		Create a patch with diff
	</h1>

	<p>
		Diff can create a patch for a single file:<br/>
		<b>$ diff -u original.c new.c &gt; original.patch</b>
	</p>

	<p>
		For diff'ing a source tree:<br/>
		<b>$ cp -R original new</b>
	</p>

	<p>
		Do whatever you want in new/ and then diff it:<br/>
		<b>$ diff -rupN original/ new/ &gt; original.patch</b>
	</p>

	<p><a href="#pagetop">Back to top of page.</a></p>

<hr/>

	<h1>
		git diff
	</h1>

	<p>
		git is something special.
	</p>

	<p>
		Just make whatever changes you want to a git clone and then:<br/>
		<b>$ git diff > patch.git</b>
	</p>

	<p>
		Note the git revision that you did this with:<br/>
		<b>$ git log</b>
	</p>

	<p><a href="#pagetop">Back to top of page.</a></p>

<hr/>

	<h1>
		git apply
	</h1>

	<p>it really is.</p>

	<p>
		Now to apply that patch in the future, just git clone it again and do
		with the git revision you found from above:<br/>
		<b>$ git reset --hard REVISIONNUMBER</b>
	</p>

	<p>
		Now put patch.git in the git clone directory and do:<br/>
		<b>$ git apply patch.git</b>
	</p>

	<p><a href="#pagetop">Back to top of page.</a></p>

<hr/>

	<p>
		Copyright &copy; 2014 Francis Rowe, All Rights Reserved.<br/>
		See <a href="license.html">license.html</a> for license conditions.
	</p>

</body>
</html>