1CG-PATCH(1) CG-PATCH(1)
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6 cg-patch - apply a patch from a file, standard input, or a commit
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9 cg-patch [-c] [-C COMMIT] [-pN] [-R] [-m | -d DIR] [OTHER_OPTIONS] <
10 PATCH
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14 Apply a patch in a manner similar to the patch tool, but while also
15 handling the Git extensions to the diff format: file mode changes, file
16 renames, distinguishing removal of files and empty files, etc. Newly
17 created files are automatically cg-add(1)ed and removed files are
18 cg-rm(1)oved.
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20 cg-patch(1) can also automatically commit the applied patches and
21 extract patches from existing commits, therefore effectively enabling
22 you to cherrypick certain changes from a different branch.
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24 In comparison with the git-apply tool, cg-patch(1) will also apply
25 fuzzy patches.
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29 -c Automatically extract the commit message and authorship
30 information (if provided) from the patch and commit it after
31 applying it successfully.
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33 -C COMMIT
34 Instead of applying a patch from stdin, apply and commit the
35 patch introduced by the given commit. This is basically an
36 extension of cg-commit -c, it also applies the commit diff.
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38 In combination with -R, this does the opposite - it will revert
39 the given commit and then try to commit a revert commit - it
40 will prefill the headline and open the commit editor for you to
41 write further details.
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43 Note that even though this is functionally equivalent to the
44 cherry-picking concept present in other version control systems,
45 this does not play very well together with regular merges and if
46 you both cherry-pick and merge between two branches, the picking
47 may increase the number of conflicts you will get when merging.
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49 -d DIRNAME
50 Instead of applying a patch from stdin, apply and separately
51 commit all patches in the specified directory. This can be used
52 to import a range of patches made by cg-mkpatch -d. Implies -c.
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54 -e Edit the commit message before performing a commit. Makes sense
55 only with -c or other options implying -c (e.g. -m).
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57 -m Applies series of patches in a mailbox fed to the command's
58 standard input. Implies -c.
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60 -pN Strip path of filenames in the diff to the level N. This works
61 exactly the same as in the patch tool except that the default
62 strip level is not infinite but 1 (or more if you are in a
63 subdirectory; in short, cg-diff | cg-patch -R and such always
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66 -R Apply the patch in reverse (therefore effectively unapply it).
67 Implies -e except when the input is not a tty.
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69 --resolved
70 In case the patch series application failed in the middle and
71 you resolved the situation, running cg-patch with with the -d or
72 -m argument as well as --resolved will cause it to pick up where
73 it dropped off and go on applying. (This includes committing the
74 failed patch; do not commit it on your own!) (For -m, you don't
75 need to feed the mailbox on stdin anymore.)
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77 -s, --signoff[=STRING]
78 Add Signed-off-by line at the end of the commit message when
79 autocommitting (-c, -C, -d or -m). Optionally, specify the exact
80 name and email to sign off with by passing: --signoff="Author
81 Name <user@example.com>".
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83 -u Make cg-patch(1) assume the patch on the input is a classic
84 unified diff instead of a diff produced by GIT or Cogito. This
85 means only that file adds and removals will be recorded even if
86 the patch file does not explicitly describe them. Use this if
87 the patch was not produced by cg-diff(1) or similar but by a
88 traditional diff tool.
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90 Takes the diff on stdin (unless specified otherwise).
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92 -h, --help
93 Print usage summary.
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95 --long-help
96 Print user manual. The same as found in cg-patch(1).
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99 Copyright © Petr Baudis, 2005
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103 cg-patch is part of cogito(7), a toolkit for managing git(7) trees.
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108 12/11/2006 CG-PATCH(1)