From: Yann E. MORIN Date: Fri, 5 Dec 2014 18:06:24 +0000 (+0100) Subject: docs/manual: document the new patch naming convention X-Git-Url: https://git.libre-soc.org/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=8e7d179f83228204f832b2f474c669bfdab889a3;p=buildroot.git docs/manual: document the new patch naming convention To ease generating patches, we now use a naming convention that is in line with what git-format-patch does, that is: - do not prefix patches with the package name - prefix patches with a 4-digit mber - start numbering at 0001 Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" Cc: Peter Korsgaard Cc: Thomas Petazzoni Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle Cc: Samuel Martin Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni --- diff --git a/docs/manual/patch-policy.txt b/docs/manual/patch-policy.txt index 745f58d283..6e27e717ab 100644 --- a/docs/manual/patch-policy.txt +++ b/docs/manual/patch-policy.txt @@ -31,16 +31,23 @@ Most patches are provided within Buildroot, in the package directory; these typically aim to fix cross-compilation, libc support, or other such issues. -These patch files should be named +--.patch+. - -A +series+ file, as used by +quilt+, may also be added in the -package directory. In that case, the +series+ file defines the patch -application order. +These patch files should be named +-.patch+. .Notes - The patch files coming with Buildroot should not contain any package version -reference in their filename. -- The field ++ in the patch file name refers to the 'apply order'. + reference in their filename. +- The field ++ in the patch file name refers to the 'apply order', + and shall start at 1; It is preferred to pad the number with zeros up to 4 + digits, like 'git-format-patch' does. E.g.: +0001-foobar-the-buz.patch+ +- Previously, it was mandatory for patches to be prefixed with the name of + the package, like +--.patch+, but that is + no longer the case. Existing packages will be fixed as time passes. 'Do + not prefix patches with the package name.' +- Previously, a +series+ file, as used by +quilt+, could also be added in + the package directory. In that case, the +series+ file defines the patch + application order. This is deprecated, and will be removed in the future. + 'Do not use a series file.' + ==== Global patch directory