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Full Discussion: UNIX Dispatching
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers UNIX Dispatching Post 3721 by loitschix on Tuesday 10th of July 2001 10:37:42 AM
Old 07-10-2001
dispatching...

hi.

i think you mean "patching", not dispatching, that is someone for network-componentsSmilie

patching is "to bring your operating system to a new patchlevel" (like installating a servicepack on microsoft). unix is very complex, and you have so much commands and modules. on every software part you have a own developer-team working, and so they fix problems, make the commands/tools/modules saver, better, faster. so it could be that there are some new patches (little peace of software thet removes or changes systemfiles/kernelfiles) every month for your system.

but be aware. dont`t install all patches you can get. always read the "readme-file". your manufacturer have always "recommended patches" to download/send, this is o.k. more patching is required when you find a problem/bug. so you can go to the knowledge database/faq-db of your manufacturer, and normaly he recommends to install a patch that fixes this problem...

best regards,
alex...
 

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CDBS-EDIT-PATCH(1)						CDBS Documentation						CDBS-EDIT-PATCH(1)

NAME
cdbs-edit-patch - create or edit a CDBS simple-patchsys.mk patch SYNOPSIS
cdbs-edit-patch patchname DESCRIPTION
cdbs-edit-patch creates or edits patches for use by the CDBS simple-patchsys.mk patch system. For more information about CDBS please see the documentation under /usr/share/doc/cdbs/. When patchname exists, cdbs-edit-patch will set up a temporary working source tree, apply all patches up to and including patchname in lex- icographic order, and spawn an interactive shell for the developer. The developer can then edit files in this working tree. When the developer is done and exits the shell, cdbs-edit-patch updates patchname to reflect the changes made. To abort the process from the inter- active shell, exit with a nonzero exit value. When patchname does not exist, cdbs-edit-patch will assume that a new patch should be created. As with the above scenario, cdbs-edit-patch will first create a temporary working source tree and apply all patches up to the new patch in lexicographic order. When the shell is quit, cdbs-edit-patch will create patchname. AUTHOR
CDBS was written by Colin Walters and others. cdbs-edit-patch was written by Martin Pitt. This manual page was written by Peter Eisen- traut based on the dpatch-edit-patch(1) manual page. SEE ALSO
CDBS documentation in /usr/share/doc/cdbs/, /usr/share/cdbs/1/rules/simple-patchsys.mk, dpatch-edit-patch(1), quilt(1) Debian 5 Feb 2006 CDBS-EDIT-PATCH(1)
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