On Mon, Jan 26, 2015 at 8:32 AM, Josh Boyer <jwboyer@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > I went to do the Fedora 3.19-rc6 build this morning and it failed in > our buildsystem with: > > + '[' '!' -f /builddir/build/SOURCES/patch-3.19-rc6.xz ']' > + case "$patch" in > + unxz > + patch -p1 -F1 -s > symbolic link target '../../../../../include/dt-bindings' is invalid > error: Bad exit status from /var/tmp/rpm-tmp.mWE3ZL (%prep) Ugh. I don't see anything we can do about this on the git side, and I do kind of understand why 'patch' would be worried about '..' files. In a perfect world, patch would parse the filename and see that it stays within the directory structure of the project, but that is a rather harder thing to do than just say "no dot-dot files". The short-term fix is likely to just use "git apply" instead of "patch". The long-term fix? I dunno. I don't see us not using symlinks, and a quick check says that every *single* symlink we have in the kernel source tree is one that points to a different directory using ".." format. And while I could imagine that "patch" ends up counting the dot-dot entries and checking that it's all inside the same tree it is patching, I could also easily see patch *not* doing that. So using "git apply" _might_ end up being the long-term fix too. I suspect that if "patch" cannot apply even old-style kernel patches due to the symlinks we have in the tree, and people end up having to use "git apply" for them, I might end up starting to just use rename-patches (ie using "git diff -M") for the kernel. I've considered that for a while already, because "patch" _does_ kind of understand them these days, although I think it gets the cross-rename case wrong because it fundamentally works on a file-by-file basis. But if "patch" just ends up not working at all, the argument for trying to maintain backwards compatibility gets really weak. Linus -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html