#! /bin/bash # A little script I whipped up to make it easy to # patch source trees and have sane error handling # -Erik # # (c) 2002 Erik Andersen # # Parameters: # - the build directory, optional, default value is '.'. The place where are # the package sources. # - the patch directory, optional, default '../kernel-patches'. The place # where are the scripts you want to apply. # - other parameters are the patch name patterns, optional, default value is # '*'. Pattern(s) describing the patch names you want to apply. # # The script will look recursively for patches from the patch directory. If a # file is named 'series' then only patches mentionned into it will be applied. # If not, the script will look for file names matching pattern(s). If the name # ends with '.tar.*', '.tbz2' or '.tgz', the file is considered as an archive # and will be uncompressed into a directory named # '.patches-name_of_the_archive-unpacked'. It's the turn of this directory to # be scanned with '*' as pattern. Remember that scanning is recursive. Other # files than series file and archives are considered as a patch. # # Once a patch is found, the script will try to apply it. If its name doesn't # end with '.gz', '.bz', '.bz2', '.xz', '.zip', '.Z', '.diff*' or '.patch*', # it will be skipped. If necessary, the patch will be uncompressed before being # applied. The list of the patches applied is stored in '.applied_patches_list' # file in the build directory. # Set directories from arguments, or use defaults. builddir=${1-.} patchdir=${2-../kernel-patches} shift 2 patchpattern=${@-*} # use a well defined sorting order export LC_COLLATE=C if [ ! -d "${builddir}" ] ; then echo "Aborting. '${builddir}' is not a directory." exit 1 fi if [ ! -d "${patchdir}" ] ; then echo "Aborting. '${patchdir}' is not a directory." exit 1 fi # Remove any rejects present BEFORE patching - Because if there are # any, even if patches are well applied, at the end it will complain # about rejects in builddir. find ${builddir}/ '(' -name '*.rej' -o -name '.*.rej' ')' -print0 | \ xargs -0 -r rm -f function apply_patch { path=$1 patch=$2 case "$patch" in *.gz) type="gzip"; uncomp="gunzip -dc"; ;; *.bz) type="bzip"; uncomp="bunzip -dc"; ;; *.bz2) type="bzip2"; uncomp="bunzip2 -dc"; ;; *.xz) type="xz"; uncomp="unxz -dc"; ;; *.zip) type="zip"; uncomp="unzip -d"; ;; *.Z) type="compress"; uncomp="uncompress -c"; ;; *.diff*) type="diff"; uncomp="cat"; ;; *.patch*) type="patch"; uncomp="cat"; ;; *) echo "Unsupported file type for ${path}/${patch}, skipping"; return 0 ;; esac echo "" echo "Applying $patch using ${type}: " if [ ! -e "${path}/$patch" ] ; then echo "Error: missing patch file ${path}/$patch" exit 1 fi echo $patch >> ${builddir}/.applied_patches_list ${uncomp} "${path}/$patch" | patch -g0 -p1 -E -d "${builddir}" -t if [ $? != 0 ] ; then echo "Patch failed! Please fix ${patch}!" exit 1 fi } function scan_patchdir { path=$1 shift 1 patches=${@-*} # If there is a series file, use it instead of using ls sort order # to apply patches. Skip line starting with a dash. if [ -e "${path}/series" ] ; then for i in `grep -Ev "^#" ${path}/series 2> /dev/null` ; do apply_patch "$path" "$i" done else for i in `cd $path; ls -d $patches 2> /dev/null` ; do if [ -d "${path}/$i" ] ; then scan_patchdir "${path}/$i" elif echo "$i" | grep -q -E "\.tar(\..*)?$|\.tbz2?$|\.tgz$" ; then unpackedarchivedir="$builddir/.patches-$(basename $i)-unpacked" rm -rf "$unpackedarchivedir" 2> /dev/null mkdir "$unpackedarchivedir" tar -C "$unpackedarchivedir" -xaf "${path}/$i" scan_patchdir "$unpackedarchivedir" else apply_patch "$path" "$i" fi done fi } scan_patchdir "$patchdir" "$patchpattern" # Check for rejects... if [ "`find $builddir/ '(' -name '*.rej' -o -name '.*.rej' ')' -print`" ] ; then echo "Aborting. Reject files found." exit 1 fi # Remove backup files find $builddir/ '(' -name '*.orig' -o -name '.*.orig' ')' -exec rm -f {} \;