kumquat-buildroot/support/scripts/apply-patches.sh
Yann E. MORIN d5ae67b4f4 support/apply-patches: re-instate set -e
As reported by Sébastien Szymanski [1], the apply-patches script
doesn't stop if a tar command can't extract an archive.

Use "set -e" to exit immediately if a command return an error.

Be sure to ignore any expected error: when we check if a patch to be
applied has the same basename as an already applied patch, the grep
would fail when no such patch was already applied. We should not fail
in this case.

Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Sébastien Szymanski <sebastien.szymanski@armadeus.com>
Cc: Romain Naour <romain.naour@openwide.fr>
Reviewed-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
2016-07-06 14:47:30 +02:00

169 lines
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#!/usr/bin/env 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 <andersen@codepoet.org>
#
# Parameters:
# - "-s", optional. Silent operation, don't print anything if there
# isn't any error.
# - 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 named 'series' exists then the patches mentioned in it will be applied
# as plain patches, regardless of their file name. If no 'series' file exists,
# 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 -e
silent=
if [ "$1" = "-s" ] ; then
# add option to be used by the patch tool
silent=-s
shift
fi
# Set directories from arguments, or use defaults.
builddir=${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="${2}"
case "${path}" in
/*) ;;
*) path="$PWD/${path}";;
esac
if [ "$3" ]; then
type="series"; uncomp="cat"
else
case "$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
fi
if [ -z "$silent" ] ; then
echo ""
echo "Applying $patch using ${type}: "
fi
if [ ! -e "${path}/$patch" ] ; then
echo "Error: missing patch file ${path}/$patch"
exit 1
fi
existing="$(grep -E "/${patch}\$" ${builddir}/.applied_patches_list || true)"
if [ -n "${existing}" ]; then
echo "Error: duplicate filename '${patch}'"
echo "Conflicting files are:"
echo " already applied: ${existing}"
echo " to be applied : ${path}/${patch}"
exit 1
fi
echo "${path}/${patch}" >> ${builddir}/.applied_patches_list
${uncomp} "${path}/$patch" | patch -g0 -p1 -E -d "${builddir}" -t -N $silent
if [ $? != 0 ] ; then
echo "Patch failed! Please fix ${patch}!"
exit 1
fi
}
function scan_patchdir {
local 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
# The format of a series file accepts a second field that is
# used to specify the number of directory components to strip
# when applying the patch, in the form -pN (N an integer >= 0)
# We assume this field to always be -p1 whether it is present
# or missing.
series_patches="`grep -Ev "^#" ${path}/series | cut -d ' ' -f1 2> /dev/null`"
for i in $series_patches; do
apply_patch "$path" "$i" series
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
}
touch ${builddir}/.applied_patches_list
scan_patchdir "$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 {} \;