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Operating Systems AIX how do you get the patching history Post 302158480 by bakunin on Tuesday 15th of January 2008 01:06:33 PM
Old 01-15-2008
gus2000 is correct. If you are looking for the revision history of a specific program instead (it was not clear to me what you meant) use the command "what".

For example:

Code:
# what /usr/bin/ls
/usr/bin/ls:
        61      1.15  src/bos/usr/ccs/lib/libc/__threads_init.c, libcthrd, bos53H, h2006_10B1 3/5/06 16:44:58
        45  1.21.8.2  src/bos/usr/bin/ls/ls.c, cmdfiles, bos53H, h2006_24B4 6/14/06 23:25:27

bakunin
 

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SPLITDIFF(1)							     Man pages							      SPLITDIFF(1)

NAME
splitdiff - separate out incremental patches SYNOPSIS
splitdiff [-a] [-d] [-p n] [-E] [file] splitdiff {[--help] | [--version]} DESCRIPTION
If you have a patch file composed of several incremental patches, you can use splitdiff to separate them out. You may want to do this in preparation for re-combining them with combinediff(1). The effect of running splitdiff is to separate its input into a set of output files, with no output file patching the same file more than once. OPTIONS
-a Split out every single file-level patch. -d Create file names such as a_b.c.patch for a patch that modifies a/b.c. -p n Strip the first n components of the pathname to aid comparisons. -E Don't use .patch filename extension when writing output files. --help Display a short usage message. --version Display the version number of splitdiff. SEE ALSO
combinediff(1), lsdiff(1) AUTHOR
Tim Waugh <twaugh@redhat.com> Package maintainer patchutils 25 May 2011 SPLITDIFF(1)
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