On Feb 15 00:11, Brian Inglis via Cygwin-apps wrote: > Hi folks, > > Linux man pages 6.03 has been released. > I realized that some of the man pages are case sensitive e.g. _[Ee]xit.2, > {NAN,nan}.3, perhaps others. > I took care of my own system using commands like below, but would appreciate > advice on whether there is any better portable or Cygwin specific approach, > and what are the opinions on the best way to handle this in the cygport for > download and install? > Is this supported by Cygwin on Windows 10 versions >= [20]18-03 with the > directory attribute set, are there likely to be any problems with git, or in > general with POSIX<->Windows file names? > > $ cd /usr/share/man/linux/ > $ for s in man?; do fsutil file setCaseSensitiveInfo $s; done
You can do this in Cygwin with the chattr(1) tool, see chattr --help. The hint "WSL must be installed" appears to be outdated, at least on Windows 11. There are two approaches for case-sensitivity, see https://cygwin.com/cygwin-ug-net/using-specialnames.html#pathnames-casesensitive https://cygwin.com/cygwin-ug-net/using-specialnames.html#pathnames-casesensitivedirs However, as part of the distro, the package must not rely on case-sensitivity. We have to assume that most users are using Windows in default settings. And we still support Windows versions prior to Windows 10 1803. But even then, I encountered serious trouble with case-sensitive directories on remote shares, see https://github.com/microsoft/WSL/issues/3885 so you'd get into trouble if the Cygwin installation is on a share. For colliding man pages, what you can do is to append a character to the man page file, so you can install both. For instance: exit.2 Exit.2a nan.3 NAN.3a Kind of like that. Corinna