# -*- coding: ascii; tab-width: 4; x-counterpart: quilt.patch -*-
Package: quilt
Version: 0.64
Revision: 1
Source: http://savannah.nongnu.org/download/%n/%n-%v.tar.gz
Source-Checksum: SHA256(c4bfd3282214a288e8d3e921ae4d52e73e24c4fead72b5446752adee99a7affd)

PatchFile: %n.patch
PatchFile-MD5: 6f0e5bc9800fe17442da65403ed2ff66

Depends: gawk, sed, getoptbin, patch, diffutils
BuildDepends: fink (>= 0.24.12), gettext-tools

ConfigureParams: --with-sed=%p/bin/sed --with-getopt=%p/bin/getopt --with-perl=/usr/bin/perl --with-find=/usr/bin/find --without-date --with-sendmail=/usr/sbin/sendmail --with-cp=/bin/cp --with-bash=/bin/bash

InfoTest: <<
	TestDepends: coreutils
	TestScript: <<
		ln -s %p/bin/gwc wc
		PATH="%b:$PATH" make check || exit 2
	<<
<<
		
DocFiles: AUTHORS COPYING TODO doc/README.MAIL doc/README doc/quilt.pdf

Description: Tool to work with series of patches
DescDetail: <<
Quilt manages a series of patches by keeping track of the changes
each of them makes. They are logically organized as a stack, and you can
apply, un-apply, refresh them easily by traveling into the stack (push/pop).

Quilt is good for managing additional patches applied to a package received
as a tarball or maintained in another version control system. The stacked
organization proved to be efficient for the management of very large patch
sets (more than hundred patches). As matter of fact, it was designed by and
for linux kernel hackers (Andrew Morton, from the -mm  branch, is the
original author), and its main use by the current upstream maintainer is to
manage the (hundreds of) patches against the kernel made for the SUSE
distribution.
<<
DescPackaging: <<
	Previously maintained by Brendan Cully <bcully@users.sourceforge.net>
<<
License: GPL2+
Homepage: http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/quilt
Maintainer: Daniel Johnson <daniel@daniel-johnson.org>