On 4/1/2015 3:47 AM, Corinna Vinschen wrote:
On Apr 1 03:26, Robert Miles wrote:
The C: drive on one of my 64-bit Windows 7 computers is approaching
90% full, but there are two other drives that are nearly empty.
Can I move the entire Cygwin and Cygwin64 directory trees to one
of the nearly
The C: drive on one of my 64-bit Windows 7 computers is approaching
90% full, but there are two other drives that are nearly empty.
Can I move the entire Cygwin and Cygwin64 directory trees to one
of the nearly empty drives, without losing the extra packages I've
already downloaded and the files
order to preserve all my backups as long as I often need them -
some
problems simply aren't obvious for a few months.
Robert Miles
--
Problem reports: http://cygwin.com/problems.html
FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/
Documentation: http://cygwin.com/docs.ht
On 3/2/2012 1:02 PM, Matt Seitz (matseitz) wrote:
From: Achim Gratz [mailto:strom...@nexgo.de]
I do and FTR: I don't want the cygwin Xorg server to be a dependency
to
all programs that might use X because that would pull in a lot of
packages that I have no use for on most systems.
Right, that
On 3/2/2012 11:43 AM, Christopher Faylor wrote:
On Fri, Mar 02, 2012 at 01:11:49AM -0600, Robert Miles wrote:
On 3/1/2012 1:38 PM, Jeremy Bopp wrote:
On 03/01/2012 01:05 PM, Eric Blake wrote:
On 03/01/2012 10:53 AM, Matt Seitz (matseitz) wrote:
[snip]
I suspect not, but I would like to see
On 3/1/2012 1:38 PM, Jeremy Bopp wrote:
On 03/01/2012 01:05 PM, Eric Blake wrote:
On 03/01/2012 10:53 AM, Matt Seitz (matseitz) wrote:
You don't think that Setup telling the user "package xyz requires
package xinit" might at least tip off some users that running xyz now
requires starting an X s
On 3/1/2012 12:07 PM, Matt Seitz (matseitz) wrote:
"Matt Seitz (matseitz)"
"Christopher Faylor" wrote:
In the meantime, if people are piling on to suggest this because they
think it will cause someone to add xinit as a dependency to something
please be assured that this will not happen.
OK, w
tried reinstalling GCC with no luck. Can anyone offer advice?
Thanks in advance,
Paul
Looks like time to check the read-write permissions on directory /tmp
and any files inside it.
Robert Miles
--
Problem reports: http://cygwin.com/problems.html
FAQ: http://cygwin.co
On 2/20/2012 4:12 PM, JonY wrote:
On 2/21/2012 05:39, Thomas Wolff wrote:
Am 20.02.2012 01:25, schrieb Christopher Faylor:
On Sun, Feb 19, 2012 at 07:07:04PM -0500, Chris Sutcliffe wrote:
...
/usr/include/stdio.h:34:20: fatal error: stddef.h: No such file or
directory
stddef.h comes from the
Gmail does not allow you to receive what appear to be email from yourself,
sent to yourself.
This mailing list is set up in a way that makes it appear that way.
You'll probably need a second email address in order to find a way to avoid
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On 2/7/2012 11:23 PM, Quinn Wood wrote:
I
compatible with the startup.exe I'm using, but does not give enough
useful information on how to switch to a newer version.
--
Robert Miles
--
Problem reports: http://cygwin.com/problems.html
FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/
Documentation: http://cygwin.com/d
On 1/25/2012 1:58 PM, Kevin Layer wrote:
Christopher Faylor wrote:
On Tue, Jan 24, 2012 at 10:03:05PM -0800, Kevin Layer wrote:
Larry Hall (Cygwin) wrote:
This problem is killing me. I'm currently looking msysgit + GnuWin32
because I just can't take the crashes of bash.exe and git.exe anymo
Are you aware that the Superfetch service deliberately tries to use most
of the
memory not otherwise in use as a cache for the most frequently accessed disk
files, in order to speed up accesses to those files? I've found it
rather slow to
release this cache memory when some other pro
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