Hello,
I understand that this is not the right message board for
question like mine, but I did not have enough time to search
for any other boards.
EduOS "Unstable" releases are published in patch.gz form. My
question is how do I use them in Linux? Please help, I am
not new to programming, but I am very new to Linux.
Thanks in advance.
Stephan
Applying patch in Linux
RE:Applying patch in Linux
>On 2001-02-23 11:34:28, Stephan wrote:
>EduOS "Unstable" releases are published in patch.gz
form. My
>question is how do I use them in Linux? Please help, I
am
>not new to programming, but I am very new to Linux.
Just use gunzip to extract the file then use your OS patch
utility.
I don't use Linux myself buy there should be a "patchadd" or
possible a "patch" command.
Try a keyword man page search "man -k patch"
>EduOS "Unstable" releases are published in patch.gz
form. My
>question is how do I use them in Linux? Please help, I
am
>not new to programming, but I am very new to Linux.
Just use gunzip to extract the file then use your OS patch
utility.
I don't use Linux myself buy there should be a "patchadd" or
possible a "patch" command.
Try a keyword man page search "man -k patch"
RE:Applying patch in Linux
>On 2001-02-23 14:46:23, Chase wrote:
>>On 2001-02-23 11:34:28, Stephan wrote:
>>EduOS "Unstable" releases are published in patch.gz
>form. My
>>question is how do I use them in Linux? Please help,
I
>am
>>not new to programming, but I am very new to Linux.
>
>Just use gunzip to extract the file then use your OS
patch
>utility.
>I don't use Linux myself buy there should be a
"patchadd" or
>possible a "patch" command.
>Try a keyword man page search "man -k patch"
>>On 2001-02-23 11:34:28, Stephan wrote:
>>EduOS "Unstable" releases are published in patch.gz
>form. My
>>question is how do I use them in Linux? Please help,
I
>am
>>not new to programming, but I am very new to Linux.
>
>Just use gunzip to extract the file then use your OS
patch
>utility.
>I don't use Linux myself buy there should be a
"patchadd" or
>possible a "patch" command.
>Try a keyword man page search "man -k patch"