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Operating Systems Linux Debian How to determine if a package needs a reboot? Post 302290425 by X-ion on Monday 23rd of February 2009 08:31:20 AM
Old 02-23-2009
Thanks for you information, this will prolly mean we will schedule all patches for between business times. Though this makes me think of security patches, since you want them to be installed straight away how can u see if a package or patch is related to security issues?
 

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STG-UNCOMMIT(1) 						   StGit Manual 						   STG-UNCOMMIT(1)

NAME
stg-uncommit - Turn regular git commits into StGit patches SYNOPSIS
stg uncommit <patch-name-1> [<patch-name-2> ...] stg uncommit -n NUM [<prefix>] stg uncommit -t <committish> [-x] DESCRIPTION
Take one or more git commits at the base of the current stack and turn them into StGIT patches. The new patches are created as applied patches at the bottom of the stack. This is the opposite of stg commit. By default, the number of patches to uncommit is determined by the number of patch names provided on the command line. First name is used for the first patch to uncommit, i.e. for the newest patch. The -n/--number option specifies the number of patches to uncommit. In this case, at most one patch name may be specified. It is used as prefix to which the patch number is appended. If no patch names are provided on the command line, StGIT automatically generates them based on the first line of the patch description. The -t/--to option specifies that all commits up to and including the given commit should be uncommitted. Only commits with exactly one parent can be uncommitted; in other words, you can't uncommit a merge. OPTIONS
-n NUMBER, --number NUMBER Uncommit the specified number of commits. -t TO, --to TO Uncommit to the specified commit. -x, --exclusive Exclude the commit specified by the --to option. STGIT
Part of the StGit suite - see linkman:stg[1] StGit 03/13/2012 STG-UNCOMMIT(1)
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