The ROCK Linux Patch Guide ========================== In order to make applying patches as efficient as possible, submitted patches should be in the format described here. I (and some maintainers of subsystems) might be refusing patches if they don't conform to this document. Please put the string [PATCH] at the beginning of the Mail Subject. It might not be seen if the word isn't part of the first few characters, since many console mail clients do only show the start of the subject in the mail index. 0. DON'T SEND UNTESTED PATCHES WITHOUT POINTING OUT CLEARLY THAT THEY ARE UNTESTED AND DON'T EXPECT UNTESTED PATCHES TO GET APPLIED. In cases of package updates, etc. it's already enought to test if the package still builds fine in a more or less generic configuration. 1. Patches should be in the the unified- or context-format. We prefer unified diffs. It should be possible to apply the patch with the command 'patch -p1 < patchfile' in the base directory. Patches created with 'cvs diff' or 'svn diff' and simmilar are also ok, as long as they are context diffs and can be applied with the the misc/archive/apply-patch.sh script. 2. The Patch shouldn't contain any files which are automatically generated by ./scripts/Puzzle. The script "./scripts/Create-Diff " can be used to easily create patches conforming to 1. and 2. 3. The patch should be against one of the latest development snapshots or (even better) the relevant Revision Control System used for the source tree. 4. One patch should solve only one issue. If you have multiple (independent) fixes, send multiple patches. 5. If a patch isn't two-lines self-describing, add a little comment and a properly formated CHANGELOG entry at the top of the patch file or the mail body. 6. If you don't get any feedback and the patch doesn't show up in the snapshots after a week, resend the patch to the maintainer. 7. Don't pack your patches to tar-files. That makes it much harder to open and read them in a mail-reader. Only compress a patch if it's _really_ big. 8. Inform the responsible maintainer when you start working on a problem to make sure you are not doing duplicate work. 9. Don't just send me the files you have been added or modified. Send me a patch against the ROCK Linux Sources (as described above). 10. NEVER SEND TAR-FILES WHICH ARE REPLACING THE FILES YOU HAVE MODIFIED AND/OR ARE ADDING NEW FILES! ALWAYS SEND PATCHES AS DESCRIBED ABOVE!