Hi,
Am Fri, 08 Oct 2010 10:35:27 +0200 schrieb Jan Holesovsky:
Hi Thomas,
On 2010-10-08 at 01:04 +0200, Thomas Klausner wrote:
From what I read, the BSD cp has very annoying behavior wrt. recursive
copying of directories, so I understand why GNU cp is preferred ;-)
Where did you read that, or can you explain directly what the problem
is?
Eg. here (even though this is not the location where I saw it for the
first time):
http://www.unix.com/shell-programming-scripting/97509-cp-r-behaviour.html
Basically, if you cp -R, the behavior differs between BSD and GNU when
you add a '/' at the end of the source dir - I suppose there might be
cases where the authors of the scripts/makefiles do not care if they
have a slash at the end of the source dir, or not, because for the GNU
cp, it does not matter.
Understood.
I'll welcome a patch that cleans it up if this really is the issue :-) -
The only issue I see are the ones with macports.
I once had a patch that used cp instead of gnu-cp but it looks like
I deleted it once Christian did the clean-up in the main OOo
sources. Arrgs. And currently I honestly don't know were to look at
this in the code.
we definitely want to make the build easier, not harder.
Once I'm familiar with git, currently it looks like git is winning,
and have current LibO sources I think I will try to build OOo,
acting like I just have to download the sources and do a configure,
make, make install. I hope that this will be the case in the next
few days, the earlier the better.
Eric
--
## de.OpenOffice.org - Office für MacOS X, Linux, Solaris & Windows
## Openoffice.org - ich steck mit drin!
Context
Privacy Policy |
Impressum (Legal Info) |
Copyright information: Unless otherwise specified, all text and images
on this website are licensed under the
Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 License.
This does not include the source code of LibreOffice, which is
licensed under the Mozilla Public License (
MPLv2).
"LibreOffice" and "The Document Foundation" are
registered trademarks of their corresponding registered owners or are
in actual use as trademarks in one or more countries. Their respective
logos and icons are also subject to international copyright laws. Use
thereof is explained in our
trademark policy.