It looks like my reply got lost in mailer's spam filters, reposting.
On Wed, Sep 15, 2010 at 5:36 PM, Christopher Faylor wrote:
...
> Cygwin summarily halts a pure-Windows process on receiving a CTRL-C.
> There is no way around that other than to relink the program to use
> Cygwin.
Do you state t
On Fri, Sep 17, 2010 at 7:58 AM, Andrew DeFaria wrote:
> On 09/16/2010 12:05 PM, Ilia K. wrote:
>>
>> Have you tried to ssh to cygwin, then run cmd.exe (to get a "dos
>> prompt") and then press Ctrl-C?
>
> Good lord man! Why would I want to do that?!?
>>
On Wed, Sep 15, 2010 at 4:43 AM, Andrew DeFaria wrote:
> On 09/14/2010 08:39 AM, Ilia K. wrote:
>>
>> Hi, All.
>> I've searched quite a lot for the subj and found no solution yet.
>> I've installed the last cygwin+openssh on Windows XP. I want to
>> con
On Tue, Sep 14, 2010 at 7:58 PM, Chan Kar Heng wrote:
> Hi there.
>
> I've had the same problem in the past.
> Posted a temporary solution here:
>
> http://www.cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2009-02/msg00403.html
This is an interesting hack, but unfortunately it won't work for
"native" apps, only for cygwi
Hi, All.
I've searched quite a lot for the subj and found no solution yet.
I've installed the last cygwin+openssh on Windows XP. I want to
connect from linux and run some native console applications
(non-cygwin CUI, particularly, cdb and cmd) and I need these
applications to correctly handle Ctrt-C
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