On 10/9/2013 01:05, Don Hatch wrote:
if I forget to set the variable, or set it wrong,
or someone else doesn't know about the variable and runs into the bug,
then corruption happens and work is irretrievably lost.
How is this more difficult than what you're already doing, manually
rolling back to the previous version?
We're talking about a one-time one-line change to your .bash_profile:
export RCS_MEM_LIMIT=10240
That will let you have 10 MiB diffs.
I tried it, and it does indeed allow your RUNME script to finish
successfully.
(I lost a significant amount when I hit the bug).
I assume you're talking about the record of changes between your last
backup and the current version. The last backup should be pretty
recent, so your current version shouldn't be too far different from it.
Would it be possible to simply declare 5.8 DOA
The Cygwin package system allows one to mark 5.8-1 as obsolete, but I
don't know if it can be told "and downgrade to 5.7-11".
If not, can we make a 5.9 that's identical to 5.7,
If a new Cygwin package had to come out based on 5.7, it would be called
5.7-12, not 5.9. GNU rcs 5.9 already exists. (The current upstream
release is 5.9.1.) Cygwin packages generally leave the upstream
revision numbers unmolested.
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