PATCH(1) manual page
Table of Contents
patch - apply a diff file to an original
patch [options] [originalfile
[patchfile]]
but usually just
patch -pnum <patchfile
patch
takes a patch file patchfile containing a difference listing produced by
the diff program and applies those differences to one or more original
files, producing patched versions. Normally the patched versions are put
in place of the originals. Backups can be made; see the -b or backup option.
The names of the files to be patched are usually taken from the patch file,
but if there’s just one file to be patched it can specified on the command
line as originalfile.
Upon startup, patch attempts to determine the type
of the diff listing, unless overruled by a -c (context), -e (ed), -n (normal),
or -u (unified) option. Context diffs (old-style, new-style, and unified) and
normal diffs are applied by the patch program itself, while ed diffs are
simply fed to the ed(1)
editor via a pipe.
patch tries to skip any leading
garbage, apply the diff, and then skip any trailing garbage. Thus you could
feed an article or message containing a diff listing to patch, and it should
work. If the entire diff is indented by a consistent amount, or if a context
diff contains lines ending in CRLF
or is encapsulated one or more times
by prepending "- " to lines starting with "-" as specified by Internet RFC
934, this is taken into account. After removing indenting or encapsulation,
lines beginning with # are ignored, as they are considered to be comments.
With context diffs, and to a lesser extent with normal diffs, patch can
detect when the line numbers mentioned in the patch are incorrect, and
attempts to find the correct place to apply each hunk of the patch. As a
first guess, it takes the line number mentioned for the hunk, plus or minus
any offset used in applying the previous hunk. If that is not the correct
place, patch scans both forwards and backwards for a set of lines matching
the context given in the hunk. First patch looks for a place where all lines
of the context match. If no such place is found, and it’s a context diff,
and the maximum fuzz factor is set to 1 or more, then another scan takes
place ignoring the first and last line of context. If that fails, and the
maximum fuzz factor is set to 2 or more, the first two and last two lines
of context are ignored, and another scan is made. (The default maximum fuzz
factor is 2.) If patch cannot find a place to install that hunk of the patch,
it puts the hunk out to a reject file, which normally is the name of the
output file plus a .rej suffix, or # if .rej would generate a file name that
is too long (if even appending the single character # makes the file name
too long, then # replaces the file name’s last character). (The rejected
hunk comes out in ordinary context diff form regardless of the input patch’s
form. If the input was a normal diff, many of the contexts are simply null.)
The line numbers on the hunks in the reject file may be different than
in the patch file: they reflect the approximate location patch thinks the
failed hunks belong in the new file rather than the old one.
As each hunk
is completed, you are told if the hunk failed, and if so which line (in
the new file) patch thought the hunk should go on. If the hunk is installed
at a different line from the line number specified in the diff you are
told the offset. A single large offset may indicate that a hunk was installed
in the wrong place. You are also told if a fuzz factor was used to make
the match, in which case you should also be slightly suspicious. If the
verbose option is given, you are also told about hunks that match exactly.
If no original file origfile is specified on the command line, patch tries
to figure out from the leading garbage what the name of the file to edit
is, using the following rules.
First, patch takes an ordered list of candidate
file names as follows:
-
- If the header is that of a context diff, patch
takes the old and new file names in the header. A name is ignored if it
does not have enough slashes to satisfy the -pnum or strip=num option. The
name /dev/null is also ignored.
-
- If there is an Index: line in the leading
garbage and if either the old and new names are both absent or if patch
is conforming to POSIX
, patch takes the name in the Index: line.
-
- For the
purpose of the following rules, the candidate file names are considered
to be in the order (old, new, index), regardless of the order that they
appear in the header.
Then patch selects a file name from the candidate
list as follows:
-
- If some of the named files exist, patch selects the
first name if conforming to POSIX
, and the best name otherwise.
-
- If patch
is not ignoring RCS
, ClearCase, Perforce, and SCCS
(see the -g num or get=num
option), and no named files exist but an RCS
, ClearCase, Perforce, or SCCS
master is found, patch selects the first named file with an RCS
, ClearCase,
Perforce, or SCCS
master.
-
- If no named files exist, no RCS
, ClearCase,
Perforce, or SCCS
master was found, some names are given, patch is not
conforming to POSIX
, and the patch appears to create a file, patch selects
the best name requiring the creation of the fewest directories.
-
- If no
file name results from the above heuristics, you are asked for the name
of the file to patch, and patch selects that name.
To determine the best
of a nonempty list of file names, patch first takes all the names with
the fewest path name components; of those, it then takes all the names
with the shortest basename; of those, it then takes all the shortest names;
finally, it takes the first remaining name.
Additionally, if the leading
garbage contains a Prereq: line, patch takes the first word from the prerequisites
line (normally a version number) and checks the original file to see if
that word can be found. If not, patch asks for confirmation before proceeding.
The upshot of all this is that you should be able to say, while in a news
interface, something like the following:
| patch -d /usr/src/local/blurfl
and patch a file in the blurfl directory directly from the article containing
the patch.
If the patch file contains more than one patch, patch tries to
apply each of them as if they came from separate patch files. This means,
among other things, that it is assumed that the name of the file to patch
must be determined for each diff listing, and that the garbage before each
diff listing contains interesting things such as file names and revision
level, as mentioned previously.
- -b or backup
- Make backup files. That
is, when patching a file, rename or copy the original instead of removing
it. When backing up a file that does not exist, an empty, unreadable backup
file is created as a placeholder to represent the nonexistent file. See
the -V or version-control option for details about how backup file names
are determined.
- backup-if-mismatch
- Back up a file if the patch does not match
the file exactly and if backups are not otherwise requested. This is the
default unless patch is conforming to POSIX
.
- no-backup-if-mismatch
- Do not back
up a file if the patch does not match the file exactly and if backups are
not otherwise requested. This is the default if patch is conforming to POSIX
.
- -B pref or prefix=pref
- Prefix pref to a file name when generating its
simple backup file name. For example, with -B /junk/ the simple backup file
name for src/patch/util.c is /junk/src/patch/util.c.
- binary
- Read and write
all files in binary mode, except for standard output and /dev/tty. This
option has no effect on POSIX
-conforming systems. On systems like DOS
where
this option makes a difference, the patch should be generated by diff -a binary.
- -c or context
- Interpret the patch file as a ordinary context diff.
- -d dir
or directory=dir
- Change to the directory dir immediately, before doing
anything else.
- -D define or ifdef=define
- Use the #ifdef ... #endif construct
to mark changes, with define as the differentiating symbol.
- dry-run
- Print
the results of applying the patches without actually changing any files.
- -e or ed
- Interpret the patch file as an ed script.
- -E or remove-empty-files
- Remove output files that are empty after the patches have been applied.
Normally this option is unnecessary, since patch can examine the time stamps
on the header to determine whether a file should exist after patching. However,
if the input is not a context diff or if patch is conforming to POSIX
,
patch does not remove empty patched files unless this option is given. When
patch removes a file, it also attempts to remove any empty ancestor directories.
- -f or force
- Assume that the user knows exactly what he or she is doing,
and do not ask any questions. Skip patches whose headers do not say which
file is to be patched; patch files even though they have the wrong version
for the Prereq: line in the patch; and assume that patches are not reversed
even if they look like they are. This option does not suppress commentary;
use -s for that.
- -F num or fuzz=num
- Set the maximum fuzz factor. This option
only applies to diffs that have context, and causes patch to ignore up
to that many lines in looking for places to install a hunk. Note that a
larger fuzz factor increases the odds of a faulty patch. The default fuzz
factor is 2, and it may not be set to more than the number of lines of
context in the context diff, ordinarily 3.
- -g num or get=num
- This option
controls patch’s actions when a file is under RCS
or SCCS
control, and does
not exist or is read-only and matches the default version, or when a file
is under ClearCase or Perforce control and does not exist. If num is positive,
patch gets (or checks out) the file from the revision control system; if
zero, patch ignores RCS
, ClearCase, Perforce, and SCCS
and does not get
the file; and if negative, patch asks the user whether to get the file.
The default value of this option is given by the value of the PATCH_GET
environment variable if it is set; if not, the default value is zero if
patch is conforming to POSIX
, negative otherwise.
- help
- Print a summary of
options and exit.
- -i patchfile or input=patchfile
- Read the patch from patchfile.
If patchfile is -, read from standard input, the default.
- -l or ignore-whitespace
- Match patterns loosely, in case tabs or spaces have been munged in your
files. Any sequence of one or more blanks in the patch file matches any
sequence in the original file, and sequences of blanks at the ends of lines
are ignored. Normal characters must still match exactly. Each line of the
context must still match a line in the original file.
- -n or normal
- Interpret
the patch file as a normal diff.
- -N or forward
- Ignore patches that seem
to be reversed or already applied. See also -R.
- -o outfile or output=outfile
- Send output to outfile instead of patching files in place. Do not use this
option if outfile is one of the files to be patched.
- -pnum or strip=num
- Strip the smallest prefix containing num leading slashes from each file
name found in the patch file. A sequence of one or more adjacent slashes
is counted as a single slash. This controls how file names found in the
patch file are treated, in case you keep your files in a different directory
than the person who sent out the patch. For example, supposing the file
name in the patch file was
/u/howard/src/blurfl/blurfl.c
setting -p0 gives the entire file name unmodified, -p1 gives
u/howard/src/blurfl/blurfl.c
without the leading slash, -p4 gives
blurfl/blurfl.c
and not specifying -p at all just gives you blurfl.c. Whatever you end
up with is looked for either in the current directory, or the directory
specified by the -d option.
- posix
- Conform more strictly to the POSIX
standard,
as follows.
-
- Take the first existing file from the list (old, new, index)
when intuiting file names from diff headers.
-
- Do not remove files that
are empty after patching.
-
- Do not ask whether to get files from RCS
, ClearCase,
Perforce, or SCCS
.
-
- Require that all options precede the files in the command
line.
-
- Do not backup files when there is a mismatch.
- quoting-style=word
- Use
style word to quote output names. The word should be one of the following:
- literal
- Output names as-is.
- shell
- Quote names for the shell if they contain
shell metacharacters or would cause ambiguous output.
- shell-always
- Quote
names for the shell, even if they would normally not require quoting.
- c
- Quote names as for a C language string.
- escape
- Quote as with c except omit
the surrounding double-quote characters.
You can specify the default value
of the quoting-style option with the environment variable QUOTING_STYLE.
If that environment variable is not set, the default value is shell.
- -r rejectfile
or reject-file=rejectfile
- Put rejects into rejectfile instead of the default
.rej file.
- -R or reverse
- Assume that this patch was created with the old
and new files swapped. (Yes, I’m afraid that does happen occasionally, human
nature being what it is.) patch attempts to swap each hunk around before
applying it. Rejects come out in the swapped format. The -R option does not
work with ed diff scripts because there is too little information to reconstruct
the reverse operation.
If the first hunk of a patch fails, patch reverses
the hunk to see if it can be applied that way. If it can, you are asked
if you want to have the -R option set. If it can’t, the patch continues to
be applied normally. (Note: this method cannot detect a reversed patch if
it is a normal diff and if the first command is an append (i.e. it should
have been a delete) since appends always succeed, due to the fact that
a null context matches anywhere. Luckily, most patches add or change lines
rather than delete them, so most reversed normal diffs begin with a delete,
which fails, triggering the heuristic.)
- -s or silent or quiet
- Work silently,
unless an error occurs.
- -t or batch
- Suppress questions like -f, but make
some different assumptions: skip patches whose headers do not contain file
names (the same as -f); skip patches for which the file has the wrong version
for the Prereq: line in the patch; and assume that patches are reversed
if they look like they are.
- -T or set-time
- Set the modification and access
times of patched files from time stamps given in context diff headers,
assuming that the context diff headers use local time. This option is not
recommended, because patches using local time cannot easily be used by
people in other time zones, and because local time stamps are ambiguous
when local clocks move backwards during daylight-saving time adjustments.
Instead of using this option, generate patches with UTC
and use the -Z
or set-utc option instead.
- -u or unified
- Interpret the patch file as a unified
context diff.
- -v or version
- Print out patch’s revision header and patch
level, and exit.
- -V method or version-control=method
- Use method to determine
backup file names. The method can also be given by the PATCH_VERSION_CONTROL
(or, if that’s not set, the VERSION_CONTROL) environment variable, which
is overridden by this option. The method does not affect whether backup
files are made; it affects only the names of any backup files that are
made.
The value of method is like the GNU
Emacs ‘version-control’ variable;
patch also recognizes synonyms that are more descriptive. The valid values
for method are (unique abbreviations are accepted):
- existing or nil
- Make
numbered backups of files that already have them, otherwise simple backups.
This is the default.
- numbered or t
- Make numbered backups. The numbered
backup file name for F is F.~N~ where N is the version number.
- simple or
never
- Make simple backups. The -B or prefix, -Y or basename-prefix, and -z
or suffix options specify the simple backup file name. If none of these
options are given, then a simple backup suffix is used; it is the value
of the SIMPLE_BACKUP_SUFFIX environment variable if set, and is .orig otherwise.
With numbered or simple backups, if the backup file name is too long, the
backup suffix ~ is used instead; if even appending ~ would make the name
too long, then ~ replaces the last character of the file name.
- verbose
- Output
extra information about the work being done.
- -x num or debug=num
- Set internal
debugging flags of interest only to patch patchers.
- -Y pref or basename-prefix=pref
- Prefix pref to the basename of a file name when generating its simple backup
file name. For example, with -Y .del/ the simple backup file name for src/patch/util.c
is src/patch/.del/util.c.
- -z suffix or suffix=suffix
- Use suffix as the simple
backup suffix. For example, with -z - the simple backup file name for src/patch/util.c
is src/patch/util.c-. The backup suffix may also be specified by the SIMPLE_BACKUP_SUFFIX
environment variable, which is overridden by this option.
- -Z or set-utc
- Set the modification and access times of patched files from time stamps
given in context diff headers, assuming that the context diff headers use
Coordinated Universal Time (UTC
, often known as GMT
). Also see the -T or
set-time option.
The -Z or set-utc and -T or set-time options normally refrain
from setting a file’s time if the file’s original time does not match the
time given in the patch header, or if its contents do not match the patch
exactly. However, if the -f or force option is given, the file time is set
regardless.
Due to the limitations of diff output format, these options
cannot update the times of files whose contents have not changed. Also,
if you use these options, you should remove (e.g. with make clean) all files
that depend on the patched files, so that later invocations of make do
not get confused by the patched files’ times.
- PATCH_GET
- This specifies
whether patch gets missing or read-only files from RCS
, ClearCase, Perforce,
or SCCS
by default; see the -g or get option.
- POSIXLY_CORRECT
- If set, patch
conforms more strictly to the POSIX
standard by default: see the posix
option.
- QUOTING_STYLE
- Default value of the quoting-style option.
- SIMPLE_BACKUP_SUFFIX
- Extension to use for simple backup file names instead of .orig.
- TMPDIR, TMP,
TEMP
- Directory to put temporary files in; patch uses the first environment
variable in this list that is set. If none are set, the default is system-dependent;
it is normally /tmp on Unix hosts.
- VERSION_CONTROL or PATCH_VERSION_CONTROL
- Selects version control style; see the -v or version-control option.
- $TMPDIR/p*
- temporary files
- /dev/tty
- controlling terminal; used to get answers to questions
asked of the user
diff(1)
, ed(1)
Marshall T. Rose and Einar A.
Stefferud, Proposed Standard for Message Encapsulation, Internet RFC 934
<URL:ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc934.txt> (1985-01).
There
are several things you should bear in mind if you are going to be sending
out patches.
Create your patch systematically. A good method is the command
diff -Naur old new where old and new identify the old and new directories. The
names old and new should not contain any slashes. The diff command’s headers
should have dates and times in Universal Time using traditional Unix format,
so that patch recipients can use the -Z or set-utc option. Here is an example
command, using Bourne shell syntax:
LC_ALL=C TZ=UTC0 diff -Naur gcc-2.7
gcc-2.8
Tell your recipients how to apply the patch by telling them which directory
to cd to, and which patch options to use. The option string -Np1 is recommended.
Test your procedure by pretending to be a recipient and applying your patch
to a copy of the original files.
You can save people a lot of grief by keeping
a patchlevel.h file which is patched to increment the patch level as the
first diff in the patch file you send out. If you put a Prereq: line in
with the patch, it won’t let them apply patches out of order without some
warning.
You can create a file by sending out a diff that compares /dev/null
or an empty file dated the Epoch (1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC
) to the file you
want to create. This only works if the file you want to create doesn’t exist
already in the target directory. Conversely, you can remove a file by sending
out a context diff that compares the file to be deleted with an empty file
dated the Epoch. The file will be removed unless patch is conforming to
POSIX
and the -E or remove-empty-files option is not given. An easy way to
generate patches that create and remove files is to use GNU
diff’s -N or
new-file option.
If the recipient is supposed to use the -pN option, do not
send output that looks like this:
diff -Naur v2.0.29/prog/README prog/README
--- v2.0.29/prog/README Mon Mar 10 15:13:12 1997
+++ prog/README Mon Mar 17 14:58:22 1997
because the two file names have different numbers of slashes, and different
versions of patch interpret the file names differently. To avoid confusion,
send output that looks like this instead:
diff -Naur v2.0.29/prog/README
v2.0.30/prog/README
--- v2.0.29/prog/README Mon Mar 10 15:13:12 1997
+++ v2.0.30/prog/README Mon Mar 17 14:58:22 1997
Avoid sending patches that compare backup file names like README.orig,
since this might confuse patch into patching a backup file instead of the
real file. Instead, send patches that compare the same base file names in
different directories, e.g. old/README and new/README.
Take care not to send
out reversed patches, since it makes people wonder whether they already
applied the patch.
Try not to have your patch modify derived files (e.g. the
file configure where there is a line configure: configure.in in your makefile),
since the recipient should be able to regenerate the derived files anyway.
If you must send diffs of derived files, generate the diffs using UTC
,
have the recipients apply the patch with the -Z or set-utc option, and have
them remove any unpatched files that depend on patched files (e.g. with make clean).
While you may be able to get away with putting 582 diff listings into one
file, it may be wiser to group related patches into separate files in case
something goes haywire.
Diagnostics generally indicate that patch
couldn’t parse your patch file.
If the verbose option is given, the message
Hmm... indicates that there is unprocessed text in the patch file and that
patch is attempting to intuit whether there is a patch in that text and,
if so, what kind of patch it is.
patch’s exit status is 0 if all hunks are
applied successfully, 1 if some hunks cannot be applied, and 2 if there
is more serious trouble. When applying a set of patches in a loop it behooves
you to check this exit status so you don’t apply a later patch to a partially
patched file.
Context diffs cannot reliably represent the creation
or deletion of empty files, empty directories, or special files such as
symbolic links. Nor can they represent changes to file metadata like ownership,
permissions, or whether one file is a hard link to another. If changes like
these are also required, separate instructions (e.g. a shell script) to accomplish
them should accompany the patch.
patch cannot tell if the line numbers are
off in an ed script, and can detect bad line numbers in a normal diff only
when it finds a change or deletion. A context diff using fuzz factor 3 may
have the same problem. Until a suitable interactive interface is added,
you should probably do a context diff in these cases to see if the changes
made sense. Of course, compiling without errors is a pretty good indication
that the patch worked, but not always.
patch usually produces the correct
results, even when it has to do a lot of guessing. However, the results
are guaranteed to be correct only when the patch is applied to exactly
the same version of the file that the patch was generated from.
The POSIX
standard specifies behavior that differs from patch’s traditional
behavior. You should be aware of these differences if you must interoperate
with patch versions 2.1 and earlier, which do not conform to POSIX
.
-
- In
traditional 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.
-
- In traditional patch, backups were enabled
by default. This behavior is now enabled with the -b or backup 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
with the posix option or by setting the POSIXLY_CORRECT
environment variable.
The -b suffix option of traditional patch is equivalent
to the -b -z suffix options of GNU
patch.
- ·
- Traditional 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.
-
- When traditional 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.
-
- Traditional 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.
-
- Limit yourself to the following options when sending instructions meant
to be executed by anyone running GNU
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
Please report bugs via
email to <bug-patch@gnu.org>.
patch could be smarter about partial matches,
excessively deviant offsets and swapped code, but that would take an extra
pass.
If code has been duplicated (for instance with #ifdef OLDCODE ... #else
... #endif), patch is incapable of patching both versions, and, if it works
at all, will likely patch the wrong one, and tell you that it succeeded
to boot.
If you apply a patch you’ve already applied, patch thinks it is
a reversed patch, and offers to un-apply the patch. This could be construed
as a feature.
Copyright (C) 1984, 1985, 1986, 1988 Larry Wall.
Copyright (C) 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998,
1999, 2000, 2001, 2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Permission is granted
to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual provided the copyright
notice and this permission notice are preserved on all copies.
Permission
is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this manual under
the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the entire resulting
derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission notice identical
to this one.
Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of
this manual into another language, under the above conditions for modified
versions, except that this permission notice may be included in translations
approved by the copyright holders instead of in the original English.
Larry
Wall wrote the original version of patch. Paul Eggert removed patch’s arbitrary
limits; added support for binary files, setting file times, and deleting
files; and made it conform better to POSIX
. Other contributors include Wayne
Davison, who added unidiff support, and David MacKenzie, who added configuration
and backup support.
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