how to get individual patches

David H. Lynch Jr. dhlii at dlasys.net
Thu Jun 29 02:18:49 EST 2006


Grant Likely wrote:
> On 6/28/06, David H. Lynch Jr. <dhlii at dlasys.net> wrote:
>>
>>     The bsp I am working on works with 2.6.16.21 but fails with 2.6.17.
>>
>>     How can I find the individual patches that make up the transition
>> from 2.6.16.21 to 2.6.17 ?
>
> Unfortunately, there isn't a direct line between .16.21 and .17 which
> makes it complicated.  Does your bsp work with .16?  If so; you can
> use the 'git bisect' command to figure out exactly where the
> regression occured.
>
> If it doesn't work on .16; you can do a bisect between .16 and .16.21
> to figure out what patch is missing between .16 and .17.
>
> $ git bisect good v2.6.16
> $ git bisect bad           # the head of the tree
> compile, test, etc.
> $ git bisect good|bad    # depends on whether it works or not
> compile, test, etc
> $ git bisect good|bad    # you get the idea... repeat until it's
> narrowed down
> $ git log                          # see where you are in the git tree.
    Thanks,

       At the moment I am not working out of a git tree - but I was
previously.
   
       What I have works with everything from 2.6.15 through 2.6.16.21 -
or atleast the 15+ odd interim steps I tried.
    It fails if I go from 2.6.16 to 2.6.17.

       I can probably actually check into why it is not working - looks
alot like an ml403 mmu hang posted earlier (I am working with a Xilinx V4).
    But I was hoping I could get away with brute force/divide and
conquer and isolate it to a single patch before actually trying to
figure out the problem.

    I am going to have to get better at git.
>
> Cheers,
> g.
>


-- 
Dave Lynch 					  	    DLA Systems
Software Development:  				         Embedded Linux
717.627.3770 	       dhlii at dlasys.net 	  http://www.dlasys.net
fax: 1.253.369.9244 			           Cell: 1.717.587.7774
Over 25 years' experience in platforms, languages, and technologies too numerous to list.

"Any intelligent fool can make things bigger and more complex... It takes a touch of genius - and a lot of courage to move in the opposite direction."
Albert Einstein




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