uot; provided when I compile this module by myself,
while the option is removed when I compile with cygport. If I try
manually compiling without this option, the same problem occurs.
The host system is Windows7. Cygwin dll is 64bit version 2.10.0-1.
wish it can be solved soon in next p
On 10/9/2011 12:08 AM, Yaakov (Cygwin/X) wrote:
On Sat, 2011-10-08 at 17:43 -0400, SJ Wright wrote:
I really don't know what could be causing this. Has anyone else had
stackdump problems with software not in the repositories, which they've
kept installed through an update such as min
kept installed through an update such as mine?
Just FYI: I posted to the support/discussion forum for Exiv2 less than
half an hour ago, You can read that thread here:
http://dev.exiv2.org/boards/3/topics/1006 .
SJ Wright
--
Problem reports: http://cygwin.com/problems.html
FAQ:
IOW,
would that map back to Windows and cause confusion?
Hope folks can answer these, if not right away then eventually.
Good times.
SJ Wright
--
"When stranded on a prehistoric planet, never throw a Scrabble letter
Qinto a privet bush."
- Advice from the Hitchhiker's Guide to
Or does such an idea go too much against the grain of "let's keep Cygwin
as much of a Unix as possible?"
At the very least, it would cut through all the rigamorole of "kill"-ing
pids that were likely to return errors.
Comments?
SJ Wright
--
Problem reports
Hi.
Well, maybe there's a better word than "improve." Maybe "streamline"
would be better. Anyhow, here it is.
Allow users to create a list of paths to GUI apps they have on their
systems -- other than the selected Windows defaults -- and using either
aliases (like "monkey" for SeaMonkey 2.0
SJ Wright wrote:
Gregg Levine wrote:
On Mon, Sep 27, 2010 at 11:26 PM, SJ Wright
wrote:
SJ Wright wrote:
First, a little background:
In quite a few previous edits of my .bash_aliases file, I've used
the same
alias to cd to a particular folder. Tonight I typed it in and go
Gregg Levine wrote:
On Mon, Sep 27, 2010 at 11:26 PM, SJ Wright wrote:
SJ Wright wrote:
First, a little background:
In quite a few previous edits of my .bash_aliases file, I've used the same
alias to cd to a particular folder. Tonight I typed it in and got the
following as a r
Csaba Raduly wrote:
On Thu, Sep 30, 2010 at 3:37 PM, SJ Wright wrote:
I know one of the trip-ups I often have if I spend any time away from a
L/Unix environment has to do with the "mv" command: I often forget that it
prefers absolute paths from root folders (or in the case
albert kao wrote:
I store a list of files in a text file (test.txt) on Windows XP.
I want to use the list of files and process it (e.g. ls).
What is the command to do that?
I tried the following commands but to no avail.
$ cat test.txt
test.txt
$ cat test.txt | xargs ls
: No such file or direct
Lee Rothstein wrote:
On 9/24/2010 5:15 AM, SJ Wright wrote:
I'd like my terminal title bar to show my current working directory,
the running process (with a fall-back to the active shell when idle)
and the word "Cygwin."
I have an old .bashrc file in which I collected code
SJ Wright wrote:
First, a little background:
In quite a few previous edits of my .bash_aliases file, I've used the
same alias to cd to a particular folder. Tonight I typed it in and got
the following as a return:
[/cygdrive/c/blu/newest]
mintty-cygwin>>smith
+ laugh
+ pwd
/cyg
First, a little background:
In quite a few previous edits of my .bash_aliases file, I've used the
same alias to cd to a particular folder. Tonight I typed it in and got
the following as a return:
[/cygdrive/c/blu/newest]
mintty-cygwin>>smith
+ laugh
+ pwd
/cygdrive/c/blu/newest
+ cd /cygdrive/
Larry Hall (Cygwin) wrote:
On 9/25/2010 9:27 PM, SJ Wright wrote:
Or is it just the difference in encodings?
In scripts and config/convenience files like .bashrc or
.bash_aliases, it can
see *through* "crunches" (#), which are supposed to make a line of text
invisible to a shell
Or is it just the difference in encodings?
In scripts and config/convenience files like .bashrc or .bash_aliases,
it can see *through* "crunches" (#), which are supposed to make a line
of text invisible to a shell
Could it be because I added a LANG variable and have been turning out
not-qui
Christopher Faylor wrote:
On Fri, Sep 24, 2010 at 05:15:38AM -0400, SJ Wright wrote:
I haven't given up totally on rxvt: mintty has more than a few
shortcomings imo, but I suspect a large part of that is that I'm not
used to using an xterm variant outside of X or GNOME. Anyway, al
Gary wrote:
Ken Brown wrote:
On 9/21/2010 5:12 PM, SJ Wright wrote:
Gary wrote:
And empty ones at that.
emacs, you say? Well, that sort of trims it down
Are you saying that you get stackdumps while using emacs?
If I had to guess at what is
Eirik Nordbrøden wrote:
Any help in this regard would be much appreciated.
Steve W.
I have these in my .bash_profile file:
# Terminal title
PROMPT_COMMAND='echo -ne "\033]0;${us...@${hostname}: ${PWD}\007"'
Works at least for xterm and MinTTY.
Eirik Nordbrøden, Morecom A/S
(+47) 901747
I'd like my terminal title bar to show my current working directory, the
running process (with a fall-back to the active shell when idle) and the
word "Cygwin."
I have an old .bashrc file in which I collected code for the middle bit
(running process), but putting the three together and making
Andy Koppe wrote:
On 22 September 2010 00:29, SJ Wright wrote:
Yes. I noticed where I had the territory mis-cased the next time I ran
wget. In the line that identified the file and URL for each download,
double-quotes and other punctuation became garbage characters, where they
hadn't
Andy Koppe wrote:
On 22 September 2010 01:54, SJ Wright wrote:
New on me. I'll start using mintty asap. Must be better than Terminator. I
did a cutesy thing with an echo-ed ellipse to mark time while a script
iterated over some lines in a list: rxvt wrapped each unbroken string
Marco Atzeri wrote:
--- Mar 21/9/10, Eric Blake ha scritto:
Use mintty or rxvt instead of the windows console.
Only mintty please, rxvt should be considered obsolete as
cygwin uses now UTF8 and rxvt can't.
New on me. I'll start using mintty asap. Must be better than
Terminato
SJ Wright wrote:
Corinna Vinschen wrote:
On Sep 18 07:00, SJ Wright wrote:
Having recently by accident trashed my home folder, and having had
to rebuild from one saved from a much older install (1.7.0 or even
earlier), I noticed my man pages were again displaying with garbage
text in between
Gary wrote:
And empty ones at that.
I see this was mentioned previously but didn't see a resolution.
For me it is definitely happening in emacs (which since I spend most of
my time in it, is maybe not that surprising), and is possibly related to
running make via 'M-x compile'.
I use mintty, so
Corinna Vinschen wrote:
On Sep 18 07:00, SJ Wright wrote:
Having recently by accident trashed my home folder, and having had
to rebuild from one saved from a much older install (1.7.0 or even
earlier), I noticed my man pages were again displaying with garbage
text in between the readable
mike marchywka wrote:
On 9/17/10, SJ Wright wrote:
4. Is it normal for any script to run CPU usage up to 100%?
Unless it is blocking for something like IO including VM swaps, why not?
Regarding #4:
I have a script that I ran in GNOME Terminal less than an hour ago. I
"time
Cyrille Lefevre wrote:
Le 17/09/2010 18:57, SJ Wright a écrit :
4. Is it normal for any script to run CPU usage up to 100%?
a common answer about bash cpu usage is to get rid of bash-completion...
if you have it installed, uninstall it, then try again.
Regards,
Cyrille Lefevre
Having recently by accident trashed my home folder, and having had to
rebuild from one saved from a much older install (1.7.0 or even
earlier), I noticed my man pages were again displaying with garbage text
in between the readable text -- nonprintable characters, Unicode litter
and the like. I
SJ Wright wrote:
Hi folks.
Through fits and starts, and with no more feedback from the list than
Dave Korn's self-admitted "wild guess" about gcclib1 folders etc, my
Cygwin is no longer shedding empty shell stack-dump files like
dandruff. But certain things are continuing to
this version/build of Cygwin? I don't
recall any such issues when running complicated scripts before 1.7.x.
Hoping someone can answer any or all of the foregoing.
Cheers, SJ Wright
--
Problem reports: http://cygwin.com/problems.html
FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/
Do
1. Lost red bold text - the escape code for red bold returns white bold;
curiously, the code for yellow plain and yellow underline or any yellow
against a background other than black, return as red.
2. Any "missed" command or command or script not found throws a line
"Aborted" and then a standar
Dave, all:
I'm just wondering why bash, or any shell, in Cygwin, or any environment
where it was able to run, would bother creating stack-dump files with
headers but no data. I haven't got the knowledge to parse and peruse the
cygcheck.out file I created, but I did take a close look at my conf
Dave Korn wrote:
On 14/09/2010 19:47, SJ Wright wrote:
Might there be something else a little off?
The text from the latest stackdump:
Stack trace:
Frame Function Args
The rest is blank. Should I be concerned, or is this something that will
work itself out?
This
SJ Wright wrote:
Might there be something else a little off?
The text from the latest stackdump:
Stack trace:
Frame Function Args
The rest is blank. Should I be concerned, or is this something that
will work itself out?
Steve W.
A little more information that seems pertinent to this
Might there be something else a little off?
The text from the latest stackdump:
Stack trace:
Frame Function Args
The rest is blank. Should I be concerned, or is this something that will
work itself out?
Steve W.
--
Problem reports: http://cygwin.com/problems.html
FAQ:
ng extra method" somewhere in
the User Guide, in my opinion. I don't doubt both new Cygwin users as
well as old hands will want to know how to do it.
Thanks again for all the help.
SJ Wright
--
The evolution of email: 1979 - A miracle 1989 - A useful tool 1999 -
Still cheap
#x27;m good to go.
Thanks to Andy for pointing me in the right direction. And if they're
still on the list, thanks also to Mark & Gary.
Cheers.
SJ Wright
--
Problem reports: http://cygwin.com/problems.html
FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/
Documentation: http://cygwin.com/docs.html
Unsubscribe info: http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple
ite -- a redesign that takes such things into consideration
is well past due, in my opinion.
Thanks for giving this a read.
SJ Wright
--
The evolution of email: 1979 - A miracle 1989 - A useful tool 1999 -
Still cheaper than postage 2009 - A pain in the a**!
If you can read this
Hi all
I've become interested in making a Cygwin distribution based on RPM.
My main reasons for doing this:
(1) I come from a RHEL/OEL/Fedora background, so I'd rather use yum
than setup.exe
(2) I like the fact that rpm has a proper database of which file owns
which package, so I can
do things lik
Hi all
I have been trying to get rpm-4.4.2.3 to compile under Cygwin.
I'm almost there, I think, but am just getting stuck at the end.
Please see the attached shell script.
The problem where it gets stuck is the final link of RPM,
where it can't find the beecrypt libraries
I've tried various
Hi
In cygstart 1.4, "cygstart --reference" opens a web browser to
http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/en-us/shellcc/platform/Shell/reference/functions/shellexecute.asp
which microsoft redirects to:
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/ms123402.aspx
which now 404s.
Now, from one perspective is Microso
Hello,
From time to time, I like use a Windows script file (VBS, JS) with
CScript/WSH. Is it possible to execute a script as a command from the
Cygwin shell without having to specify the 'interpreter' (CScript)? This
would then operate like a Perl or BASH script.
I've tried using a 'shebang' ap
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