
On 10/22/2012 11:24 AM, Gene Czarcinski wrote:
On 10/22/2012 09:26 AM, Gene Czarcinski wrote:
I am pretty much complete creating a patch which changes how dnsmasq is started by moving the command line parameters into a conf file. This new file is placed into the same directory and the lease file.
The test for the command line arguments now checks the contents of the conf-file and there is no longer any tests for the command line parameters which are now two.
The first command line parameter is (naturally) --conf-file=<filename>.
The second parameter adds new functionality and is --conf-dir=<directory>. This directory is placed into the same directory as the conf-file and the lease file. The name of this directory is "<net-name>.d". This was added to make testing/debugging of new dnsmasq options easier since it no longer requires rebuilding the binaries. This is also useful for adding log-dhcp and/or log-queries for a specific network.
Now the option question. I can submit the patch assuming the my previously submitted patch to add --interface to the command line has been applied or I can assume that it has not been applied. In either case, the new code adds a interface=<dev-name> to the conf-file.
All development and testing was done with 0.10.2 libvirt src.rpm on Fedora 17.
The patch will be submitted based on git.
I have checked and the patch applies clean to the v0.10.2-maint branch but has problems with the top level. Is providing the patch against the v0.10.2-maint branch adequate or do you want it reworked (does not look like a big deal) to the top level?
It's much simpler if it applies to the head of master. Try doing this: 1) "git log" and grab the commit ID 2) git checkout master 3) git pull 4) git checkout -b newbranch (or whatever you want to call it) 5) git cherry-pick ${commit-id} This may give you a clean merge (at which point you can just "git send-email -1") or it may give some conflicts. These conflicts will be marked in the source file with: <<<<<<<<< code on current branch ========= conflicting code from cherry-picked patch
>>>
do a hand merge of the differences, then run "git commit". You should now have a properly merged commit - do "make check && make syntax-check" then git send-email -1.