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发表于 2003-7-6 20:52:14
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Snapshots are images from the developers repository trees. They are created automatically without any human consideration, and thus they may not work, and may not even compile at any particular time. They live in the snapshots directories in the archives, and should be applied using the patch(1) utility to the source code of the previous full release.
Prepatches are the equivalent to alpha releases for Linux; they live in the testing directories in the archives. They should be applied using the patch(1) utility to the source code of the previous full release. The testing/incr directories contain automatically generated patches from one prepatch to another.
Prepatches may be poorly tested, and may in fact not work at all. Use on your own risk; if you use one and run into a problem please see Reporting Linux Kernel Bugs on the front page.
Prepatches with -rc in the name are considered release candidates and may become full versions. It is therefore particularly important that those get tested.
The -ac patches are a set of patches, released by Alan Cox, against the official kernel series. They are frequently more experimental in nature than the official series. These patches are available in Alan's kernel directory:
/pub/linux/kernel/people/alan/
The -dj patches are a set of patches, released by David Jones, against the official beta kernel series. They are frequently more experimental in nature than the official series. These patches are available in David's kernel directory:
/pub/linux/kernel/people/davej/patches/
bk should be bitkeeper. i think u need patch one by one.
they are independent. |
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