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libtoolize must be checked_for and there needs to be a wrapper that points to GNU libtoolize since that may be installed as glibtoolize. This fixes a problem with building Cloog/PPL that was Reported-by: "Pierrick Brossin" <pierrick@bs-network.net> Signed-off-by: "Titus von Boxberg" <titus@v9g.de>
295 lines
9.8 KiB
Plaintext
295 lines
9.8 KiB
Plaintext
File.........: C - Misc. tutorials.txt
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Copyright....: (C) 2010 Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@anciens.enib.fr>
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License......: Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike (CC-by-sa), v2.5
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Misc. tutorials /
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________________/
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Using crosstool-NG on FreeBSD (and other *BSD) |
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-----------------------------------------------+
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Contributed by: Titus von Boxberg
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Prerequisites and instructions for using ct-ng for building a cross toolchain on FreeBSD as host.
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0) Tested on FreeBSD 8.0
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1) Install (at least) the following ports
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archivers/lzma
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textproc/gsed
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devel/gmake
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devel/patch
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shells/bash
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devel/bison
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lang/gawk
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devel/automake110
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ftp/wget
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Of course, you should have /usr/local/bin in your PATH.
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2) run ct-ng's configure with the following tool configuration:
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./configure --with-sed=/usr/local/bin/gsed --with-make=/usr/local/bin/gmake \
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--with-patch=/usr/local/bin/gpatch
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[...other configure parameters as you like...]
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3) proceed as described in general documentation
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but use gmake instead of make
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Using crosstool-NG on MacOS-X |
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------------------------------+
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Contributed by: Titus von Boxberg
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Prerequisites and instructions for using crosstool-NG for building a cross
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toolchain on MacOS as host.
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0) Mac OS Snow Leopard, with Developer Tools 3.2 installed, or
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Mac OS Leopard, with Developer Tools & newer gcc (>= 4.3) installed
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via macports
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1) You have to use a case sensitive file system for ct-ng's build and target
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directories. Use a disk or disk image with a case sensitive fs that you
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mount somewhere.
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2) Install macports (or similar easy means of installing 3rd party software),
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make sure that macport's bin dir is in your PATH.
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Furtheron assuming it is /opt/local/bin.
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3) Install (at least) the following macports
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lzmautils
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libtool
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binutils
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gsed
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gawk
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gcc43 (only necessary for Leopard OSX 10.5)
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On Leopard, make sure that the macport's gcc is called with the default
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commands (gcc, g++,...), e.g. via macport gcc_select
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4) run ct-ng's configure with the following tool configuration
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(assuming you have installed the tools via macports in /opt/local):
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./configure --with-sed=/opt/local/bin/gsed \
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--with-libtool=/opt/local/bin/glibtool \
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--with-libtoolize=/opt/local/bin/glibtoolize \
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--with-objcopy=/opt/local/bin/gobjcopy \
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--with-objdump=/opt/local/bin/gobjdump \
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--with-readelf=/opt/local/bin/greadelf \
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[...other configure parameters as you like...]
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5) proceed as described in standard documentation
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-----
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HINTS:
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- Apparently, GNU make's builtin variable .LIBPATTERNS is misconfigured
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under MacOS: It does not include lib%.dylib.
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This affects build of (at least) gdb-7.1
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Put 'lib%.a lib%.so lib%.dylib' as .LIBPATTERNS into your environment
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before executing ct-ng build.
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See http://www.gnu.org/software/make/manual/html_node/Libraries_002fSearch.html
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as an explanation.
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- ct-ng menuconfig will not work on Snow Leopard 10.6.3 since libncurses
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is broken with this release. MacOS <= 10.6.2 and >= 10.6.4 are ok.
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Using Mercurial to hack crosstool-NG |
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-------------------------------------+
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Contributed by: Titus von Boxberg
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PREREQUISITES:
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Configuring Mercurial:
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You need mercurial with the following extensions:
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- mq : http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/MqExtension
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- patchbomb : http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/PatchbombExtension
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Usually, these two extensions are already part of the installation package.
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The mq extension maintains a separate queue of your local changes
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that you can change at any later time.
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With the patchbomb extension you can email those patches directly
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from your local repo.
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Your configuration file for mercurial, e.g. ~/.hgrc should contain
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at least the following sections (but have a look at `man hgrc`):
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# ---
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[email]
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# configure sending patches directly via Mercurial
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from = "Your Name" <your@email.address>
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# How to send email:
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method = smtp
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[smtp]
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# SMTP configuration (only for method=smtp)
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host = localhost
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tls = true
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username =
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password =
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[extensions]
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# The following lines enable the two extensions:
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hgext.mq =
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hgext.patchbomb =
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# ----
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Create your local repository as a clone:
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hg clone http://crosstool-ng.org/hg/crosstool-ng crosstool-ng
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Setting up the mq extension in your local copy:
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cd crosstool-ng
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hg qinit
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CREATING PATCHES:
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Recording your changes in the patch queue maintained by mq:
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# First, create a new patch entry in the patch queue:
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hg qnew -D -U -e short_patch_name1
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<edit patch description as commit message (see below for an example)>
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<now edit the ct-ng sources and check them>
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# if you execute `hg status` here, your modifications of the working
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# copy should show up.
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# Now the following command takes your modifications from the working copy
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# into the patch entry
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hg qrefresh -D [-e]
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<reedit patch description [-e] if desired>
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# Now your changes are recorded, and `hg status` should show a clean
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# working copy
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Repeat the above steps for all your modifications.
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The command `hg qseries` informs you about the content of your patch queue.
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CONTRIBUTING YOUR PATCHES:
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Once you are satisfied with your patch series, you can (you should!)
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contribute them back to upstream.
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This is easily done using the `hg email` command.
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`hg email` sends your new changesets to a specified list of recipients,
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each patch in its own email, all ordered in the way you entered them (oldest
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first). The command line flag --outgoing selects all changesets that are in
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your local but not yet in the upstream repository. Here, these are exactly
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the ones you entered into your local patch queue in the section above, so
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--outgoing is what you want.
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Each email gets the subject set to: "[PATCH x of n] <series summary>"
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where 'x' is the serial number in the email series, and 'n' is the total number
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of patches in the series. The body of the email is the complete patch, plus
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a handful of metadata, that helps properly apply the patch, keeping the log
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message, attribution and date, tracking file changes (move, delete, modes...)
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`hg email` also threads all outgoing patch emails below an introductory
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message. You should use the introductory message (command line flag --intro)
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to describe the scope and motivation for the whole patch series. The subject
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for the introductory message gets set to: "[PATCH 0 of n] <series summary>"
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and you get the chance to set the <series summary>.
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Here is a sample `hg email` complete command line:
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Note: replace " (at) " with "@"
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hg email --outgoing --intro \
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--to '"Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998 (at) anciens.enib.fr>' \
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--cc 'crossgcc (at) sourceware.org'
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# It then opens an editor and lets you enter the subject
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# and the body for the introductory message.
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Use `hg email` with the additional command line switch -n to
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first have a look at the email(s) without actually sending them.
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MAINTAINING YOUR PATCHES:
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When the patches are refined by discussing them on the mailing list,
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you may want to finalize and resend them.
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The mq extension has the idiosyncrasy of imposing a stack onto the queue:
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You can always reedit/refresh only the patch on top of stack.
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The queue consists of applied and unapplied patches
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(if you reached here via the above steps, all of your patches are applied),
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where the 'stack' consists of the applied patches, and 'top of stack'
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is the latest applied patch.
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The following output of `hg qseries` is now used as an example:
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0 A short_patch_name1
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1 A short_patch_name2
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2 A short_patch_name3
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3 A short_patch_name4
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You are now able to edit patch 'short_patch_name4' (which is top of stack):
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<Edit the sources>
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# and execute again
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hg qrefresh -D [-e]
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<and optionally [-e] reedit the commit message>
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If you want to edit e.g. patch short_patch_name2, you have to modify
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mq's stack so this patch gets top of stack.
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For this purpose see `hg help qgoto`, `hg help qpop`, and `hg help qpush`.
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hg qgoto short_patch_name2
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# The patch queue should now look like
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hg qseries
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0 A short_patch_name1
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1 A short_patch_name2
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2 U short_patch_name3
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3 U short_patch_name4
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# so patch # 1 (short_patch_name2) is top of stack.
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<now reedit the sources for short_patch_name2>
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# and execute again
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hg qrefresh -D [-e]
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<and optionally [-e] reedit the commit message>
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# the following command reapplies the now unapplied two patches:
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hg qpush -a
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# you can also use `hg qgoto short_patch_name4` to get there again.
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RESENDING YOUR REEDITED PATCHES:
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By mailing list policy, please resend your complete patch series.
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--> Go back to section "CONTRIBUTING YOUR PATCHES" and resubmit the full set.
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SYNCING WITH UPSTREAM AGAIN:
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You can sync your repo with upstream at any time by executing
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# first unapply all your patches:
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hg qpop -a
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# next fetch new changesets from upstream
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hg pull
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# then update your working copy
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hg up
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# optionally remove already upstream integrated patches (see below)
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hg qdelete <short_name_of_already_applied_patch>
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# and reapply your patches if any non upstream-integrated left (but see below)
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hg qpush -a
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Eventually, your patches get included into the upstream repository
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which you initially cloned.
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In this case, before executing the hg qpush -a from above
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you should manually "hg qdelete" the patches that are already integrated upstream.
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HOW TO FORMAT COMMIT MESSAGES (aka patch descriptions):
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Commit messages should look like (without leading pipes):
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|component: short, one-line description
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|optional longer description
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|on multiple lines if needed
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|Signed-off-by: as documented in section 7 of ct-ng's documentation
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Here is an example commit message (see revision 8bb5151c5b01):
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kernel/linux: fix type in version strings
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I missed refreshing the patch before pushing. :-(
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Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@anciens.enib.fr>
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