Pádraig Brady <p...@draigbrady.com> wrote: > Mike Frysinger wrote: >> On Tuesday 03 February 2009 03:28:58 Jim Meyering wrote: >>> Mike Frysinger <vap...@gentoo.org> wrote: >>>> On Friday 23 January 2009 09:35:54 Pádraig Brady wrote: >>>>> What distribution are you using (I'm guessing Fedora 10). >>>>> Distributions that patch coreutils really should >>>>> modify the version string accordingly. >>>> if coreutils wants distros to do that, it should really facilitate >>>> things. the way gcc does it now with gcc-4.3+ is a pretty good standard: >>>> ./configure ... --with-pkgversion="some vendor/distro string" ... >>> Good idea. >>> Patches welcome. >> >> do you want the gcc method or a new method ? >> >> gcc does: >> - running `gcc --version` outputs: >> gcc (GCC) 4.3.3 >> - running `configure --with-pkgversion=PKG` changes it to: >> gcc (PKG) 4.3.3 >> >> so the coreutils analog would be: >> - running `ls --version` outputs: >> ls (GNU coreutils) 6.12 >> - running `configure --with-pkgversion=PKG` changes it to: >> ls (PKG) 6.12 >> >> that way we could end up with: >> ls (Gentoo p1.0) 6.12 >> -mike >> > > Well I'd be a little worried about putting numbers > in there in case scripts parsing output from --version got confused > (like our bootstrap script for example). > > How about: > > ls (Gentoo coreutils) 6.12 > ls (Red Hat coreutils) 6.12 > ... > > Or perhaps we could use the wget example on my fedora distro: > GNU Wget 1.10.2 (Red Hat modified)
Mike, if you're preparing a patch, please put the distro information inside the parentheses, and after "GNU coreutils", i.e., do something like this: ls (GNU coreutils, Gentoo p1.0) 6.12 Whether it has distro-specific patches doesn't change the fact that it's part of the "GNU coreutils" package, so it should continue to say that. _______________________________________________ Bug-coreutils mailing list Bug-coreutils@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/bug-coreutils