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Re: Failure to build cvs 1.11.2 on Windows
From: |
Martin Tomes |
Subject: |
Re: Failure to build cvs 1.11.2 on Windows |
Date: |
Mon, 22 Apr 2002 12:36:41 +0100 |
User-agent: |
Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.0; en-US; rv:1.0rc1) Gecko/20020417 |
Larry Jones wrote:
> Martin Tomes writes:
>
>>C:\cvs-1.11.2\lib\valloc.c(10) : fatal error C1083: Cannot open include
>>file: 'getpagesize.h': No such file or directory
> You can download it from:
>
<http://ccvs.cvshome.org/unbranded-source/browse/~checkout~/ccvs/lib/getpagesize.h?rev=1.2>
Thanks, I did that and it built, but the client appears to be broken.
cvs 1.10 talks to the 1.11.2 server but my windows 1.11.2 client doesn't:
cvs checkout -s
' from cvs server warning: unrecognized response `ok
is what I get and then it hangs. I traced it through in the debugger
and it gets to get_server_responses() after sending the first command
(valid-something or others) and processes the first line it gets
successfully, but the second line it reads is 'ok\n' which fails to
match any of the strings in the responses array because of the newline
on the end of the ok response from the server.
The server is RedHat 7.2 with cvs 1.11.2 built from source, the client
was build using VC++ 6 on Windows 2000 (the version I built using VC++ 5
behaves in the same way). I am using rsh authentication.
Any idea how I can fix this?
--
Martin Tomes
address@hidden
"Security in Outlook is like having Homer Simpson guard a Dunkin' Donuts
factory."
Larry Jones wrote:
> Martin Tomes writes:
>
>>C:\cvs-1.11.2\lib\valloc.c(10) : fatal error C1083: Cannot open include
>>file: 'getpagesize.h': No such file or directory
> You can download it from:
>
<http://ccvs.cvshome.org/unbranded-source/browse/~checkout~/ccvs/lib/getpagesize.h?rev=1.2>
Thanks, I did that and it built, but the client appears to be broken.
cvs 1.10 talks to the 1.11.2 server but my windows 1.11.2 client doesn't:
cvs checkout -s
' from cvs server warning: unrecognized response `ok
is what I get and then it hangs.
--
Martin Tomes
address@hidden
"Security in Outlook is like having Homer Simpson guard a Dunkin' Donuts
factory."