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-rw-r--r--.gitignore1
-rwxr-xr-xDocumentation/cmd-list.perl1
-rw-r--r--Documentation/git-am.txt5
-rw-r--r--Documentation/git-applymbox.txt98
-rw-r--r--Documentation/hooks.txt6
-rw-r--r--Makefile2
-rwxr-xr-xgit-applymbox.sh121
7 files changed, 6 insertions, 228 deletions
diff --git a/.gitignore b/.gitignore
index 4dc0c395f..76c0e1b8b 100644
--- a/.gitignore
+++ b/.gitignore
@@ -7,7 +7,6 @@ git-add--interactive
git-am
git-annotate
git-apply
-git-applymbox
git-applypatch
git-archimport
git-archive
diff --git a/Documentation/cmd-list.perl b/Documentation/cmd-list.perl
index 443802a9a..0bca3469e 100755
--- a/Documentation/cmd-list.perl
+++ b/Documentation/cmd-list.perl
@@ -72,7 +72,6 @@ __DATA__
git-add mainporcelain
git-am mainporcelain
git-annotate ancillaryinterrogators
-git-applymbox ancillaryinterrogators
git-applypatch purehelpers
git-apply plumbingmanipulators
git-archimport foreignscminterface
diff --git a/Documentation/git-am.txt b/Documentation/git-am.txt
index 25cf84a0c..049e46f3f 100644
--- a/Documentation/git-am.txt
+++ b/Documentation/git-am.txt
@@ -128,8 +128,7 @@ is terminated before the first occurrence of such a line.
When initially invoking it, you give it names of the mailboxes
to crunch. Upon seeing the first patch that does not apply, it
-aborts in the middle, just like 'git-applymbox' does. You can
-recover from this in one of two ways:
+aborts in the middle,. You can recover from this in one of two ways:
. skip the current patch by re-running the command with '--skip'
option.
@@ -146,7 +145,7 @@ names.
SEE ALSO
--------
-gitlink:git-applymbox[1], gitlink:git-applypatch[1], gitlink:git-apply[1].
+gitlink:git-applypatch[1], gitlink:git-apply[1].
Author
diff --git a/Documentation/git-applymbox.txt b/Documentation/git-applymbox.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index ea919ba5d..000000000
--- a/Documentation/git-applymbox.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,98 +0,0 @@
-git-applymbox(1)
-================
-
-NAME
-----
-git-applymbox - Apply a series of patches in a mailbox
-
-
-SYNOPSIS
---------
-'git-applymbox' [-u] [-k] [-q] [-m] ( -c .dotest/<num> | <mbox> ) [ <signoff> ]
-
-DESCRIPTION
------------
-Splits mail messages in a mailbox into commit log message,
-authorship information and patches, and applies them to the
-current branch.
-
-
-OPTIONS
--------
--q::
- Apply patches interactively. The user will be given
- opportunity to edit the log message and the patch before
- attempting to apply it.
-
--k::
- Usually the program 'cleans up' the Subject: header line
- to extract the title line for the commit log message,
- among which (1) remove 'Re:' or 're:', (2) leading
- whitespaces, (3) '[' up to ']', typically '[PATCH]', and
- then prepends "[PATCH] ". This flag forbids this
- munging, and is most useful when used to read back 'git
- format-patch -k' output.
-
--m::
- Patches are applied with `git-apply` command, and unless
- it cleanly applies without fuzz, the processing fails.
- With this flag, if a tree that the patch applies cleanly
- is found in a repository, the patch is applied to the
- tree and then a 3-way merge between the resulting tree
- and the current tree.
-
--u::
- Pass `-u` flag to `git-mailinfo` (see gitlink:git-mailinfo[1]).
- The proposed commit log message taken from the e-mail
- are re-coded into UTF-8 encoding (configuration variable
- `i18n.commitencoding` can be used to specify project's
- preferred encoding if it is not UTF-8). This used to be
- optional but now it is the default.
-+
-Note that the patch is always used as-is without charset
-conversion, even with this flag.
-
--n::
- Pass `-n` flag to `git-mailinfo` (see
- gitlink:git-mailinfo[1]).
-
--c .dotest/<num>::
- When the patch contained in an e-mail does not cleanly
- apply, the command exits with an error message. The
- patch and extracted message are found in .dotest/, and
- you could re-run 'git applymbox' with '-c .dotest/<num>'
- flag to restart the process after inspecting and fixing
- them.
-
-<mbox>::
- The name of the file that contains the e-mail messages
- with patches. This file should be in the UNIX mailbox
- format. See 'SubmittingPatches' document to learn about
- the formatting convention for e-mail submission.
-
-<signoff>::
- The name of the file that contains your "Signed-off-by"
- line. See 'SubmittingPatches' document to learn what
- "Signed-off-by" line means. You can also just say
- 'yes', 'true', 'me', or 'please' to use an automatically
- generated "Signed-off-by" line based on your committer
- identity.
-
-
-SEE ALSO
---------
-gitlink:git-am[1], gitlink:git-applypatch[1].
-
-
-Author
-------
-Written by Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
-
-Documentation
---------------
-Documentation by Junio C Hamano and the git-list <git@vger.kernel.org>.
-
-GIT
----
-Part of the gitlink:git[7] suite
-
diff --git a/Documentation/hooks.txt b/Documentation/hooks.txt
index aabb9750f..aad17447e 100644
--- a/Documentation/hooks.txt
+++ b/Documentation/hooks.txt
@@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ applypatch-msg
--------------
This hook is invoked by `git-applypatch` script, which is
-typically invoked by `git-applymbox`. It takes a single
+typically invoked by `git-am`. It takes a single
parameter, the name of the file that holds the proposed commit
log message. Exiting with non-zero status causes
`git-applypatch` to abort before applying the patch.
@@ -30,7 +30,7 @@ pre-applypatch
--------------
This hook is invoked by `git-applypatch` script, which is
-typically invoked by `git-applymbox`. It takes no parameter,
+typically invoked by `git-am`. It takes no parameter,
and is invoked after the patch is applied, but before a commit
is made. Exiting with non-zero status causes the working tree
after application of the patch not committed.
@@ -45,7 +45,7 @@ post-applypatch
---------------
This hook is invoked by `git-applypatch` script, which is
-typically invoked by `git-applymbox`. It takes no parameter,
+typically invoked by `git-am`. It takes no parameter,
and is invoked after the patch is applied and a commit is made.
This hook is meant primarily for notification, and cannot affect
diff --git a/Makefile b/Makefile
index 29243c6e8..870179b08 100644
--- a/Makefile
+++ b/Makefile
@@ -206,7 +206,7 @@ SCRIPT_SH = \
git-repack.sh git-request-pull.sh git-reset.sh \
git-sh-setup.sh \
git-tag.sh git-verify-tag.sh \
- git-applymbox.sh git-applypatch.sh git-am.sh \
+ git-applypatch.sh git-am.sh \
git-merge.sh git-merge-stupid.sh git-merge-octopus.sh \
git-merge-resolve.sh git-merge-ours.sh \
git-lost-found.sh git-quiltimport.sh
diff --git a/git-applymbox.sh b/git-applymbox.sh
deleted file mode 100755
index c18e80ff8..000000000
--- a/git-applymbox.sh
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,121 +0,0 @@
-#!/bin/sh
-##
-## "dotest" is my stupid name for my patch-application script, which
-## I never got around to renaming after I tested it. We're now on the
-## second generation of scripts, still called "dotest".
-##
-## Update: Ryan Anderson finally shamed me into naming this "applymbox".
-##
-## You give it a mbox-format collection of emails, and it will try to
-## apply them to the kernel using "applypatch"
-##
-## The patch application may fail in the middle. In which case:
-## (1) look at .dotest/patch and fix it up to apply
-## (2) re-run applymbox with -c .dotest/msg-number for the current one.
-## Pay a special attention to the commit log message if you do this and
-## use a Signoff_file, because applypatch wants to append the sign-off
-## message to msg-clean every time it is run.
-##
-## git-am is supposed to be the newer and better tool for this job.
-
-USAGE='[-u] [-k] [-q] [-m] (-c .dotest/<num> | mbox) [signoff]'
-. git-sh-setup
-
-git var GIT_COMMITTER_IDENT >/dev/null || exit
-
-keep_subject= query_apply= continue= utf8=-u resume=t
-while case "$#" in 0) break ;; esac
-do
- case "$1" in
- -u) utf8=-u ;;
- -n) utf8=-n ;;
- -k) keep_subject=-k ;;
- -q) query_apply=t ;;
- -c) continue="$2"; resume=f; shift ;;
- -m) fall_back_3way=t ;;
- -*) usage ;;
- *) break ;;
- esac
- shift
-done
-
-case "$continue" in
-'')
- rm -rf .dotest
- mkdir .dotest
- num_msgs=$(git-mailsplit "$1" .dotest) || exit 1
- echo "$num_msgs patch(es) to process."
- shift
-esac
-
-files=$(git-diff-index --cached --name-only HEAD) || exit
-if [ "$files" ]; then
- echo "Dirty index: cannot apply patches (dirty: $files)" >&2
- exit 1
-fi
-
-case "$query_apply" in
-t) touch .dotest/.query_apply
-esac
-case "$fall_back_3way" in
-t) : >.dotest/.3way
-esac
-case "$keep_subject" in
--k) : >.dotest/.keep_subject
-esac
-
-signoff="$1"
-set x .dotest/0*
-shift
-while case "$#" in 0) break;; esac
-do
- i="$1"
- case "$resume,$continue" in
- f,$i) resume=t;;
- f,*) shift
- continue;;
- *)
- git-mailinfo $keep_subject $utf8 \
- .dotest/msg .dotest/patch <$i >.dotest/info || exit 1
- test -s .dotest/patch || {
- echo "Patch is empty. Was it split wrong?"
- exit 1
- }
- git-stripspace < .dotest/msg > .dotest/msg-clean
- ;;
- esac
- while :; # for fixing up and retry
- do
- git-applypatch .dotest/msg-clean .dotest/patch .dotest/info "$signoff"
- case "$?" in
- 0)
- # Remove the cleanly applied one to reduce clutter.
- rm -f .dotest/$i
- ;;
- 2)
- # 2 is a special exit code from applypatch to indicate that
- # the patch wasn't applied, but continue anyway
- ;;
- *)
- ret=$?
- if test -f .dotest/.query_apply
- then
- echo >&2 "* Patch failed."
- echo >&2 "* You could fix it up in your editor and"
- echo >&2 " retry. If you want to do so, say yes here"
- echo >&2 " AFTER fixing .dotest/patch up."
- echo >&2 -n "Retry [y/N]? "
- read yesno
- case "$yesno" in
- [Yy]*)
- continue ;;
- esac
- fi
- exit $ret
- esac
- break
- done
- shift
-done
-# return to pristine
-rm -fr .dotest