The "usage" text should explain it all. I found, in my quilt series
handling endeavours, that I wanted to be able to shift the prefix
numbers of a patch series.

Signed-off-by: Damien Lespiau <damien.lesp...@intel.com>
---
 frob-patch-rank | 47 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 1 file changed, 47 insertions(+)
 create mode 100755 frob-patch-rank

diff --git a/frob-patch-rank b/frob-patch-rank
new file mode 100755
index 0000000..4be42e5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/frob-patch-rank
@@ -0,0 +1,47 @@
+#!/bin/sh
+set -e
+
+script=$(basename $0)
+[ $# -ge 3 ] || {
+       echo "Usage: $script start end expr"
+       echo
+       echo "  Frob patches."
+       echo
+       echo "  This tiny script renames \"git format-patch\" patches by 
executing 'expr'"
+       echo "  on the number that prefix the patch file, but only if the patch 
file name "
+       echo "  starts with a number in ['start','end']."
+       echo
+       echo "Examples:"
+       echo "  $ ls *patch"
+       echo "  0008-Super-patch.patch"
+       echo "  0009-Mega-patch.patch"
+       echo "  $ $script 8 9 -7"
+       echo "  $ ls *patch"
+       echo "  0001-Super-patch.patch"
+       echo "  0002-Mega-patch.patch"
+       echo
+       echo "Examples:"
+       echo "  $ ls *patch"
+       echo "  0117-Super-patch.patch"
+       echo "  0118-Mega-patch.patch"
+       echo "  $ $script 8 9 +900 -17"
+       echo "  $ ls *patch"
+       echo "  1000-Super-patch.patch"
+       echo "  1001-Mega-patch.patch"
+       exit 1
+}
+
+start=$1
+end=$2
+shift 2
+op=$*
+
+for i in $(seq $start $end); do
+       prefix=$(printf "%04d" $i)
+       for f in $(ls $prefix-*.patch); do
+               base=${f#$prefix-}
+               ((n=$i $op))
+               new_prefix=$(printf "%04d" $n)
+               mv $prefix-$base $new_prefix-$base
+       done
+done
-- 
1.8.3.1

_______________________________________________
Intel-gfx mailing list
Intel-gfx@lists.freedesktop.org
http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/intel-gfx

Reply via email to