docs: remove Paper tool method for patch mods

We no longer have the `paper` script around, and as such the docs for it are
stale, and we should remove them.

This additionally adds a tiny note about compilation possibly failing when you
work without a complete patch-set.
This commit is contained in:
Mariell Hoversholm 2021-09-02 08:14:17 +02:00
parent 3e7769feae
commit f69015a417

View file

@ -15,8 +15,6 @@ To generate and update the TOC: https://github.com/mzlogin/vim-markdown-toc -->
* [Adding Patches](#adding-patches)
* [Modifying Patches](#modifying-patches)
* [Method 1](#method-1)
* [Using the Paper tool](#using-the-paper-tool)
* [Manual method: Stashing](#manual-method-stashing)
* [Method 2 - Fixup commits](#method-2---fixup-commits)
* [Manual method](#manual-method)
* [Automatic method](#automatic-method)
@ -141,34 +139,8 @@ edit it using `git rebase`.
> ❗ While in the middle of an edit, you will not be able to compile unless you
> *also* reset the opposing module(s) to a related commit. In the API's case,
> you must reset the Server, and reset the API if you're editing the Server.
#### Using the Paper tool
*CURRENTLY NOT OPERATIONAL*
The PaperMC build tool provides a handy command to automatically do this type of
patch modification.
1. Type `./paper edit server` or `./paper edit api` depending on which project
you want to edit;
- It should show something like
[this](https://gist.github.com/zachbr/21e92993cb99f62ffd7905d7b02f3159) in
the text editor you get.
- If your editor does not have a "menu" at the bottom, you're using `vim`.
If you don't know how to use `vim` and don't want to
learn, enter `:q!` and press enter. Before redoing this step, do
`export EDITOR=nano` for an easier editor to use.
1. Replace `pick` with `edit` for the commit/patch you want to modify, and
"save" the changes;
- Only do this for **one** commit at a time.
1. Make the changes you want to make to the patch;
1. Type `./paper edit continue` in the root directory to finish and rebuild
patches;
1. PR your modified patch file(s) back to this repository.
#### Manual method: Stashing
In case you need something more complex or want more control, these step-by-step
instruction do exactly what the above slightly automated system above does.
> Note also that either module _may_ not compile when doing so. This is not
> ideal nor intentional, but it happens. Feel free to fix this in a PR to us!
1. If you have changes you are working on, type `git stash` to store them for
later;