On Wed, Sep 7, 2016 at 3:52 PM, Harald Schilly <harald.schi...@gmail.com> wrote: > so, this might work, but how to update it later on? would a git pull > with your edits properly overwrite the files served on the master > mirror? Most of them are also autogenerated, at least partially, so > that's another aspect to think about, too. >
obviously, autogenerated files should not be checked in the repo. But for this one has to know how they are generated... > -- h > > > On Wed, Sep 7, 2016 at 4:47 PM, Dima Pasechnik <dimp...@gmail.com> wrote: >> I'd try the following: >> >> * get a copy of the website locally >> >> * make all the symlinks relative (is it OK?) >> >> * check in all the non-binaries and symlinks >> >> Are there any symlinks to binaries? >> >> >> On Wed, Sep 7, 2016 at 3:32 PM, Harald Schilly <harald.schi...@gmail.com> >> wrote: >>> Hi, I started https://github.com/sagemath/files and already added a >>> bit on the server, but stumbled over general idiocies. So, I don't >>> want to spend more time on this. E.g. there are symlinks, but git >>> doesn't like them, and there is something odd going on with an already >>> existing ssh key vs. github. Maybe with a little bit more nerves I am >>> able to do this. (unless I really need to bind-mount directories as >>> root, that might then be impossible for me) >>> >>> -- h >>> >>> >>> On Sun, Sep 4, 2016 at 12:28 PM, Dima Pasechnik <dimp...@gmail.com> wrote: >>>> Well, I already complained to Harald about another README there that is >>>> hopelessly old too. >>>> I'd like to propose putting all these files there on >>>> github.com/sagemath/mirrorfiles or something like that >>>> and maintain them there. >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> On Saturday, September 3, 2016 at 12:55:36 PM UTC, leif wrote: >>>>> >>>>> leif wrote: >>>>> > John Cremona wrote: >>>>> >> On 2 September 2016 at 16:36, leif <not.r...@online.de >>>>> >> <mailto:not.r...@online.de>> wrote: >>>>> >> >>>>> >> John Cremona wrote: >>>>> >> > Since I had never tried downloading and running a binary, I >>>>> >> thought I >>>>> >> > would. For a laptop running ubuntu 14.04 I looked at the UK >>>>> >> mirror and >>>>> >> > found no 7.3 binary so I downloaded the 7.2 one (there was 7.3 >>>>> >> for >>>>> >> > ubuntu 12.04 but not 14.04 or later). >>>>> >> >>>>> >> 32-bit?!?!!!! (For Sage 7.3, there are 64-bit binaries for 12.04, >>>>> >> 14.04, 15.10 and 16.04.) >>>>> >> >>>>> >> >>>>> >> Well yes (uname -m returns i686). For some reason I did this >>>>> >> experiment >>>>> >> on a small and slow Toshiba netbook. >>>>> >> >>>>> >> >>>>> >> >>>>> >> As reported on sage-release, 32-bit (native) Ubuntu builds >>>>> >> currently >>>>> >> don't work for any Ubuntu version > 12.04 because of issues with >>>>> >> -fstack-protector (which Ubuntu's GCCs by default enable). Nobody >>>>> >> has >>>>> >> yet tracked this further down. (I planned to revive a 32-bit >>>>> >> machine >>>>> >> for debugging/testing, but haven't yet had the time, but there >>>>> >> doesn't >>>>> >> seem to be much demand either.) >>>>> >> >>>>> >> >>>>> >> I had not realised this was such a can of worms. I used to regularly >>>>> >> build Sage on this machine (slowly, but then I do sleep) and last did >>>>> >> so >>>>> >> with 7.0. I can do so again if there is call for it (and this >>>>> >> conversation is better suited to sage-devel). >>>>> > >>>>> > Well, give for example Sage 7.3 a try. In case that works for you >>>>> > (without setting SAGE_INSTALL_GCC=yes), you can create a bdist yourself >>>>> > (see link below). >>>>> > >>>>> > I guess my Pentium4 (though with just 2GB, and USB-2.0-attached external >>>>> > disk only) would be a bit faster, but I'd have to repair the SFF power >>>>> > supply, or rather replace its fan once again; it also at the moment has >>>>> > Lucid and Precise only...) >>>>> > >>>>> > >>>>> >> > Using the command-line I unpacked >>>>> >> > the tarball (tar jxf ...tar.bz2) which created a SageMath >>>>> >> directory, so >>>>> >> > I cd'd into there and typed ./sage. As the original poster >>>>> >> reported, >>>>> >> > this resulted in a lot of "patching..." messages appearing, >>>>> >> followed by >>>>> >> > the 7.2 banner and a sage: prompt. Subsequent runs also worked >>>>> >> without >>>>> >> > the patching stuff. >>>>> >> > >>>>> >> > This does not help much, though I wonder how many of the posted >>>>> >> binaries >>>>> >> > are tested? And why is it neccessary to patch all those files? >>>>> >> >>>>> >> Because unfortunately people decided to break "relocating" Sage, >>>>> >> which >>>>> >> still worked a while ago (modulo very few and minor issues >>>>> >> perhaps). >>>>> >> >>>>> >> So bdists are now made with some separate script / program from >>>>> >> Volker, >>>>> >> such that they "patch" themselves upon installation / first attempt >>>>> >> to >>>>> >> run 'sage'. Loads of (absolute) paths in scripts but also binaries >>>>> >> and >>>>> >> libraries thereby get (again) hardcoded to the actual installation >>>>> >> folder. >>>>> >> >>>>> >> I thought that would be the reason; so it's Volker's script which >>>>> >> could >>>>> >> be made less frightening to the novice user. >>>>> > >>>>> > https://github.com/sagemath/binary-pkg >>>>> > >>>>> > You can create an issue or a pull request... ;-) >>>>> >>>>> P.S.: There's a horribly outdated README.txt (with still uppercase >>>>> SAGE, and among other flaws, telling one could move the Sage tree >>>>> anywhere): http://files.sagemath.org/linux/32bit/README.txt >>>>> >>>>> I guess the ones in the other bdist subfolders aren't much better. >>>>> >>>>> On the other hand, the web page itself (i.e., index.html) gives recent >>>>> info on uncompressing the various(?) formats offered. There we could >>>>> also add some short info on how to proceed after downloading. >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> More worms escaping the can... (I'd say Pandora's box though.) >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> -leif >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> P.P.S.: Just noticed in the mentioned description of compression >>>>> formats, there's "everything" but what we currently solely offer (namely >>>>> .tar.bz2, for whatever reason)... 8-) >>>>> >>>>> Nearly the same for the linux/64bit/ folder, including README.txt (while >>>>> there's also some left-over beta rpm, and also an obsolete >>>>> sage-x.y.z-sage.math.washington.edu-x86_64-Linux.txt). >>>>> >>>>> CC'ing Harald, as I'm not going to open an issue on GitHub. Maybe we >>>>> should also forward this to sage-devel, but with a more appropriate title. >>>>> >>>>> >>>> -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "sage-support" group. 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