"Larry Hall" scribbled on Wednesday, August 18, 2004 1:10 AM: > At 04:32 PM 8/17/2004, Hannu wrote: >> [EMAIL PROTECTED] i.e. Larry Hall, wrote: >>> At 05:39 AM 8/17/2004, you <as quoted by Larry - "Fergus"> wrote: >> >> -zNIPz here and there- >>>> I know we can install Cygwin wherever we like (default c:\Cygwin\ >>>> but it could be c:\MyOS\ or g:\Cygwin\ or even, after overcoming an >>>> objection, the root directory g:\). But has Cygwin its own >>>> expectations of what else is where? >> >>> Cygwin imposes no requirements on the location of the Windows >>> installation. Whatever the problem is with this failure, it is >>> installation specific and not endemic to Cygwin. >> >> -WJM-mode=OFF- > > FWIW, I never turned on the WJM mode. > > >> While there _should_ be no requirements, one has to be realistic and >> recognize this possibly beeing a setup - or postinstall - malfunction >> triggered by the "nonstandard install location". > > > That would be a bug. But since Fergus was asking whether Cygwin > "expected" certain things in certain locations, the answer to that > would be "no".
Of course, that's the intention. Nothing said about that. > If it weren't "no", then anyone installing Cygwin to > a drive other than C: would see problems. The lack of email to this > list on the matter is just one indication that Cygwin has no > expectations of where things live. The lack of messages might just as well be an indication of the number of people actually trying this particular thing. SIDENOTE: I've seen situations where a person attempting something similar just gives up immediately, without any questions. Just the comment "Crap! I don't wanna bother more with it!". No help requested even though there are several people knowledgable enough standing within arms reach. I've seen it not just once - and I must admit; I've done the same myself! (Download free/shareware/whatever software; installation doesn't work -> scrap it, try another similarily promising package) > The code itself would be another. Hmm... I don't get this; is it a back reference to the "bug"-thing above? > ;-) Ahh, I *understand* this! ;-) > If a postinstall script is making some such assumptions, I'd expect we > would've heard quite a bit about that here too (or at > cygwin-apps). Not all malfunctions/mishaps get reported - a report requires some time and effort to put through; not to mention - the "WJM" attitude, at display relatively often, plays part in this. Many people won't stand up against it. It is desirable to have *good* problem reports, but when you request higher quality you also filter away some. It is a dilemma. FYI: My current employment is all about customer support; *I* _must_ handle those imprecise and badly phrased problem reports too; eventually the real problem gets revealed through the linguistic mist. (many .ro/.ru/.ba/.tw top domains emerge here -i.e. ppl not so used to english) > But if someone does find such a bug, that's certainly something that > should be reported to cygwin-apps. Yep. /Hannu E K Nevalainen, B.Sc. EE - 59+16.37'N, 17+12.60'E --72--> ** mailing list preference; please keep replies on list ** -- printf("LocalTime: UTC+%02d\n",(DST)? 2:1); -- --END OF MESSAGE-- -- Unsubscribe info: http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple Problem reports: http://cygwin.com/problems.html Documentation: http://cygwin.com/docs.html FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/