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and the POSIX Standard, Up: Merging with patch
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patch
and Traditional patch
¶
The current version of GNU patch
normally follows the POSIX standard. See patch
and the POSIX Standard, for the few exceptions to this general rule.
Unfortunately, POSIX redefined the behavior of patch
in several important ways. You should be aware of the following differences if you must interoperate with traditional patch
, or with GNU patch
version 2.1 and earlier.
patch
, the -p option’s operand was optional, and a bare -p was equivalent to -p0. The -p option now requires an operand, and -p 0 is now equivalent to -p0. For maximum compatibility, use options like -p0 and -p1.
Also, traditional patch
simply counted slashes when stripping path prefixes; patch
now counts pathname components. That is, a sequence of one or more adjacent slashes now counts as a single slash. For maximum portability, avoid sending patches containing // in file names.
patch
, backups were enabled by default. This behavior is now enabled with the --backup (-b) option.
Conversely, in POSIX patch
, backups are never made, even when there is a mismatch. In GNU patch
, this behavior is enabled with the --no-backup-if-mismatch option, or by conforming to POSIX.
The -b suffix option of traditional patch
is equivalent to the ‘-b -z suffix’ options of GNU patch
.
patch
used a complicated (and incompletely documented) method to intuit the name of the file to be patched from the patch header. This method did not conform to POSIX, and had a few gotchas. Now patch
uses a different, equally complicated (but better documented) method that is optionally POSIX-conforming; we hope it has fewer gotchas. The two methods are compatible if the file names in the context diff header and the ‘Index:’ line are all identical after prefix-stripping. Your patch is normally compatible if each header’s file names all contain the same number of slashes.patch
asked the user a question, it sent the question to standard error and looked for an answer from the first file in the following list that was a terminal: standard error, standard output, /dev/tty, and standard input. Now patch
sends questions to standard output and gets answers from /dev/tty. Defaults for some answers have been changed so that patch
never goes into an infinite loop when using default answers.patch
exited with a status value that counted the number of bad hunks, or with status 1 if there was real trouble. Now patch
exits with status 1 if some hunks failed, or with 2 if there was real trouble.patch
, traditional patch
, or a patch
that conforms to POSIX. Spaces are significant in the following list, and operands are required.
-c -d dir -D define -e -l -n -N -o outfile -pnum -R -r rejectfile
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