@c @c COPYRIGHT (c) 1988-2002. @c On-Line Applications Research Corporation (OAR). @c All rights reserved. @c @c $Id$ @c @node General Development Tool Hints, What is GNU?, Top, Top @chapter General Development Tool Hints @ifinfo @menu * What is GNU?:: * How do I generate a patch?:: * How do I apply a patch?:: @end menu @end ifinfo The questions in this category are related to the GNU development tools in a non-language specific way. @node What is GNU?, How do I generate a patch?, General Development Tool Hints, General Development Tool Hints @section What is GNU? Take a look at @uref{http://www.gnu.org,http://www.gnu.org} for information on the GNU Project. @node How do I generate a patch?, How do I apply a patch?, What is GNU?, General Development Tool Hints @section How do I generate a patch? The RTEMS patches to the development tools are generated using a command like this @example diff -N -P -r -c TOOL-original-image TOOL-with-changes >PATCHFILE @end example where the options are: @itemize @bullet @item -N and -P take care of adding and removing files (be careful not to include junk files like file.mybackup) @item -r tells diff to recurse through subdirectories @item -c is a context diff (easy to read for humans) @end itemize Please look at the generated PATCHFILE and make sure it does not contain anything you did not intend to send to the maintainers. It is easy to accidentally leave a backup file in the modified source tree or have a spurious change that should not be in the PATCHFILE. If you end up with the entire contents of a file in the patch and can't figure out why, you may have different CR/LF scheme in the two source files. The GNU open-source packages usually have UNIX style CR/LF. If you edit on a Windows platform, the line terminators may have been transformed by the editor into Windows style. @node How do I apply a patch?, , How do I generate a patch?, General Development Tool Hints @section How do I apply a patch? Patches generated with the @code{diff} program are fed into the @code{patch} program as follows: @example patch -p1