Difference between revisions of "HowTo:Apply Patch"

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(svn v.1.7 makes it easy)
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=== Windows ===
 
=== Windows ===
There probably aren't any pre-installed utilities, but third-party ones are available (e.g. GnuWin32 [http://gnuwin32.sourceforge.net/packages/patch.htm includes it]). Also, in Windows you probably would use Subversion via front-end, and advanced ones (e.g. [http://tortoisesvn.net/docs/release/TortoiseSVN_en/tsvn-dug-patch.html TortoiseSVN]) can create and apply patches all on their own.
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There probably aren't any pre-installed utilities, but third-party ones are available (e.g. GnuWin32 [http://gnuwin32.sourceforge.net/packages/patch.htm includes it]). Also, in Windows you probably would use Subversion via front-end / GUI client, and advanced ones (e.g. [http://tortoisesvn.net/docs/release/TortoiseSVN_en/tsvn-dug-patch.html TortoiseSVN]) allow to apply patches on their own.
  
 
== Create patch file ==
 
== Create patch file ==
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<code><br/>~/repositories/VegaStrike/trunk/vegastrike$ svn diff src/cmd/ai src/cmd/unit.cpp >~/tmp/MyLatestVSPatch.patch <br/>
 
<code><br/>~/repositories/VegaStrike/trunk/vegastrike$ svn diff src/cmd/ai src/cmd/unit.cpp >~/tmp/MyLatestVSPatch.patch <br/>
 
</code> - When SVN command is used without extra options like above, it compares the working copy with its backup base. Note that diff (standalone or SVN) will see path relatively to the place where it's running, so it's better to launch it from trunk/vegastrike too, but narrow the scope as needed via parameters - in the example src/cmd/unit.cpp and all files in src/cmd/* are checked for differences, but nothing else.
 
</code> - When SVN command is used without extra options like above, it compares the working copy with its backup base. Note that diff (standalone or SVN) will see path relatively to the place where it's running, so it's better to launch it from trunk/vegastrike too, but narrow the scope as needed via parameters - in the example src/cmd/unit.cpp and all files in src/cmd/* are checked for differences, but nothing else.
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Creation of diff to SVN base or HEAD is supported by most GUI front-ends, even simple ones.
  
 
== Revert patch ==
 
== Revert patch ==
It's easy to [http://svnbook.red-bean.com/en/1.7/svn.ref.svn.c.revert.html revert] a SVN working copy or its part to the original state, but it's also possible to ''un''-apply patches one by one - at least, if the patched files aren't changed after the patch in question was applied:
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It's easy to [http://svnbook.red-bean.com/en/1.7/svn.ref.svn.c.revert.html revert] a SVN working copy or its part to the original state as it was taken from the repository. But it's also possible to ''un''-apply patches one by one - at least, if the affected files weren't changed after the patch in question was applied (i.e. if more than one of them modified the same file, revert them from the last to the first):
 
<code><br/> ~/repositories/VegaStrike/trunk/vegastrike$ patch -p0 -R -i ~/tmp/MyLatestVSPatch.patch <br/>
 
<code><br/> ~/repositories/VegaStrike/trunk/vegastrike$ patch -p0 -R -i ~/tmp/MyLatestVSPatch.patch <br/>
 
</code> or
 
</code> or

Revision as of 22:30, 16 July 2013


Basics

A patch file (or diff file - it's one and the same) contains instructions on modifying a set of existing text files from known originals. It's used in Sourceforge projects to publish the newest code changes that didn't yet make it into "official" SVN, so if you want to beta-test and review the lattest proposal for VS code, you need to download and apply patches. It's a very good idea to look into the patch file before applying it (they are plain text, after all). For one, it's a non-reviewed piece of code that will be executable, and you probably would like to make sure it's no more hacky than it's supposed to be. Even if you trust the source, at very least look whether it's really a patchfile and whether you're about to apply it in the same place where it expects the files to be.

Apply patch file

Subversion 1.7 can apply patch on its own] with a single command, e.g.:
~/repositories/VegaStrike/trunk/vegastrike$ svn patch ~/tmp/MyLatestVSPatch.patch
Earlier versions of Subversion don't have patch subcommand, so you need other tools.

Linux

In Linux, you probably already have (if you got Subversion package installed on Debian/*Ubuntu, it should be there too) patch utility, so all you need is to go at the proper base path (relatively to which path of each file is given, the same where diff was taken - usually trunk/vegastrike) - and type in command shell:
/your/working/copy/directory.../trunk/vegastrike$ patch -p0 -i /wherever/you/saved/that/patch.../PatchFileName.patch
- e.g.
~/repositories/VegaStrike/trunk/vegastrike$ patch -p0 -i ~/tmp/MyLatestVSPatch.patch
If everything worked, you'll get a report like
patching file src/cmd/unit_generic.h
patching file src/cmd/unit.cpp
patching file src/cmd/unit_generic.cpp
note that pathes here are relative to trunk/vegastrike.

If you use a Subversion front-end, it may be able to apply patch on its own, or at least open the command shell at the right place (e.g. in PySVN Workbench, right-click on the repository tree on the right panel).

Windows

There probably aren't any pre-installed utilities, but third-party ones are available (e.g. GnuWin32 includes it). Also, in Windows you probably would use Subversion via front-end / GUI client, and advanced ones (e.g. TortoiseSVN) allow to apply patches on their own.

Create patch file

To create patchfiles, you need only Subversion client itself. The proper command looks like this:
~/repositories/VegaStrike/trunk/vegastrike$ svn diff src/cmd/ai src/cmd/unit.cpp >~/tmp/MyLatestVSPatch.patch
- When SVN command is used without extra options like above, it compares the working copy with its backup base. Note that diff (standalone or SVN) will see path relatively to the place where it's running, so it's better to launch it from trunk/vegastrike too, but narrow the scope as needed via parameters - in the example src/cmd/unit.cpp and all files in src/cmd/* are checked for differences, but nothing else.

Creation of diff to SVN base or HEAD is supported by most GUI front-ends, even simple ones.

Revert patch

It's easy to revert a SVN working copy or its part to the original state as it was taken from the repository. But it's also possible to un-apply patches one by one - at least, if the affected files weren't changed after the patch in question was applied (i.e. if more than one of them modified the same file, revert them from the last to the first):
~/repositories/VegaStrike/trunk/vegastrike$ patch -p0 -R -i ~/tmp/MyLatestVSPatch.patch
or
~/repositories/VegaStrike/trunk/vegastrike$ svn patch --reverse-diff ~/tmp/MyLatestVSPatch.patch