> On 5 Jul 2020, at 02:46, Brandon helsley <brandon.hels...@hotmail.com> wrote:
[…] > The documentation for (diff -u) says "To create a suitable diff for a single > patch, copy the file that needs patching to something.orig, save the changes > to something and then create the patch:" > % diff -u something.orig something > something.diff > > Im not sure really the meaning of this documentation. What file needs > patching, which file to copy, where to save changes to exactly, and how and > why the svn method is different. Which method should I choose? I know it says > that unified diff and svn are preffered but since I am new maybe the (diff > -u) command would be easier to begin with? Please help and include anything > that's relevant even if i didn't mention it. I'm really excited to get > started and will absorb like a sponge any know how that's offered!!! For making changes to a port, I find ’svn diff’ to be the easiest way by far. I tend to do this: 1. svn up my work-in-progress ports tree 2. Make the changes and run tests (portlint, poudriere testport etc) 3. cd /ports; svn diff thecategory/theport > /portpatches/thecategory_theport_version.diff (change the paths to the dirs of your choice) 4. Upload the .diff file to Bugzilla Since I use svn in step 1, svn takes care of tracking the changes so I don’t need to keep .orig files and run diff by hand. The diffing that Jonathan mentioned is more applicable if you have to make changes to the upstream code itself in order for it to work on FreeBSD. I personally do that in the port’s ‘work’ dir and create the patches with ‘make makepatch’, and there I need to create .orig files (cp file.c file.c.orig before making changes). Hope this helps, Vidar Karlsen _______________________________________________ freebsd-ports@freebsd.org mailing list https://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-ports To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-ports-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"