> sorry if my messages have been a bit harsh with gpio freedback.  the 
> unwrapped 
> lines and broken patch formats make me see red.

I understand; There are rules to adhere to.
But please also understand what I'm working with here. Making a single patch 
takes me - I kid you not - one hour. And still it comes out borked.

We are obliged to strictly work under Windows. Laptops with full partition true 
crypt avoids dual boot and gets the i7 quad-core on it's knees like a heroine 
hooker. On that base I'm running VM-ware...

At the office we're using Perforce. Not a bad system, but it doesn't deal with 
patches very well and it's inaccessible from my home office. So I'm using 
Subversion on my NAS as an intermediate archive to work from, committing my 
changes to P4 every now and then. You guys are using Git; I'm sure it's 
superior but I don't have time now to figure that one beyond the basics. Every 
time I need to make or re-make a patch, I have to clone a clean Git repository, 
revert my SVN workspace back to the work I'm making a patch off, merge that 
into the clean Git repository and create a new patch.

And I still have to mail the patch. No attachments allowed, I understand, but 
copying and pasting between a Linux VM and Windows host trashes the leading 
space, so I either have to go through the patch and put it back myself. Or I 
can use Exchange web-based mail, that sometimes decides to send HTML mail 
anyway.

In my home office I'm using a 12-core MacPro as a workstation. Again Linux is 
under a VM, because I need a Windows VM too, to have crippled access to the 
office network. To post patches from my home office, I'm using Mac Mail through 
my own windows server, but Mail somehow doesn't offer the feature to wrap lines 
at column 72. Instead it uses the format designator to indicate flow-format, 
understood by any modern email program, but not anticipating people on the 
other side receiving email in Vim, or applying patches directly from their 
mailbox.

So even though I had finally convinced management that it's in their best 
interest to get our work back into the mainline, I decided to bail out because 
it's just too much work. Even though not ideal, I think we're better off 
maintaining our 100 lines worth of work. And even if all technical difficulties 
could be fixed - I'll express myself mildly, but I cannot leave this unsaid - 
the social standards here are not really my thing.

Robert.
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