On Sat, 23 Jul 2005, Holly Bostick wrote:

Benno Schulenberg schreef:
Holly Bostick wrote:

I understand heavy development, but three
upgrades in three days is a bit much even for me


Come on, Holly, when you're running unstable (~x86), you've got to
be ready to take frequent updates.  Or, to circumvent this, you
could sync less often: once a week works fine here.

In this case, syncing less often wasn't an issue-- the reason I had to
upgrade to 1.0.6 was due to a GLSA.

I don't find any GLSA on firefox-1.0.6. Even the official firefox release
notes doesn't list any security fixes.



(since it takes
an hour and a half or so to compile each program, and further
means I have to use Konq for that time if I don't want to mess up
ff by having it loaded while it's upgrading.


There's no problem with using Firefox while it is being compiled.
Only as soon as it has actually been merged, it may be wise to
restart it.


Not completely true. You can use an already-opened instance of
Firefox--- as long as you stay within the same window.

Open another window for any reason, and the whole thing will close down
(because you can't open a new instance of Firefox while Firefox is
compiling). So forums or database sites that open new windows to create
posts, or display information about an item in the database are
unuseable during this time.

Rather than control my surfing, I prefer to use another browser until
Firefox is finished compiling.

Erhm.. I don't know how in the world you could be seeing this kind of behavior while compiling firefox...

Anyways, you're just so wrong here, Holly (and Benno is right). Don't you
understand the concept of compiling? When something is being compiled
*nothing* gets installed during that time, and so it couldn't interfere
with your current installation. The program gets installed only after
compiling has finished.

make && make install, you know... or do you?

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T.G.
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