nevermind, I finally found the solution in an earlier post in this
newsgroup. I didn't have cygwin's bin directory in my window's PATH.
JesusFreke
"news.gmane.org" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Hello,
>
> I'm having problems getting the system() function to work
From: Christopher Faylor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: new snapshot with some tty/WinMe fixes
Date: Sat, 3 Jan 2004 19:41:33 -0500
On Sat, Jan 03, 2004 at 07:18:07PM -0500, Pierre A. Humblet wrote:
>>I could be wrong but I don't recall saying tha
Hello,
I'm having problems getting the system() function to work correctly outside
of the cygwin environment.
for example, I compile the following file in the BASH environment using the
command
gcc systemtest.c -out systemtest.exe
int main(void)
{
return system("notepad.exe");
}
then, while
I have a shared library which has undefined references to functions. On Linux
I can build and use the library without problems, but when I build it as a
DLL using Cygwin the undefined references are link errors. Can the Windows
loader handle unresolved symbols in DLLs at runtime? Is there som
At 04:12 PM 1/3/2004, Gerrit P. Haase wrote:
>Hallo Beman,
>
>I cannot reproduce it here on my NT4 SP 6a:
John Maddock can't reproduce it on his system either.
First, my results for the queries below are shown after your results:
>$ uname -svr
>CYGWIN_NT-4.0 1.5.5(0.94/3/2) 2003-09-20 16:31
CYGW
On Saturday 03 January 2004 04:47 am, Gerrit P. Haase wrote:
> There is a (small) patch included in the Cygwin source package, maybe
> that helps?
The library compiles fine on Linux (granted, I'm using gcc 3.2.2 there) so I
would expect it to work using Cygwin. I'll track down the patch and pass
On Sat, Jan 03, 2004 at 07:18:07PM -0500, Pierre A. Humblet wrote:
>>I could be wrong but I don't recall saying that I'd fixed that problem.
>
>You are right, you said: "I tried all of the test cases that Pierre
>previously reported but I'm sure I missed one." So I looked for the
>one.
Yes, you ca
At 06:25 PM 1/3/2004 -0500, Christopher Faylor wrote:
>On Sat, Jan 03, 2004 at 06:16:28PM -0500, Pierre A. Humblet wrote:
>>1) With the snapshot I can start cygwin programs fine and I have not
observed
>>any popup.
>
>Wish I could say the same. I am seeing the popup consistently. At least
now I
>
On Sat, Jan 03, 2004 at 06:16:28PM -0500, Pierre A. Humblet wrote:
>1) With the snapshot I can start cygwin programs fine and I have not observed
>any popup.
Wish I could say the same. I am seeing the popup consistently. At least now I
can duplicate it. I even understand it.
>2) The regression
y old friend vfork, so I have hopefully fixed that. I tried all
>of the test cases that Pierre previously reported but I'm sure I
>missed one. I didn't change any of the fork handling, AFAIK, just
>vfork. That means that /bin/sh and make are potentially affected.
CYGWIN_ME-4
At 04:12 PM 1/3/2004, Gerrit P. Haase you wrote:
>Hallo Beman,
>
>I cannot reproduce it here on my NT4 SP 6a:
In case it's of any interest, the version that I compiled
was the same as Gerrit's in every way except it was on
W2K + SP3.
>Can you run it with gdb and try to figure out what fail
Hallo Beman,
I cannot reproduce it here on my NT4 SP 6a:
$ uname -svr
CYGWIN_NT-4.0 1.5.5(0.94/3/2) 2003-09-20 16:31
$ cygcheck -c gcc
Cygwin Package Information
Package VersionStatus
gcc 3.3.1-3OK
$ cygcheck -c gcc-g++
Cygwin Package Information
Pa
I managed to get a WinMe installation up and running here so I can now
debug some of the problems that show up there. And, they were
interesting problems indeed. It seems like something sometimes starts
up a stray thread on WinMe and that thread does not register itself with
the new signal handle
"Christopher Faylor" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> On Fri, Jan 02, 2004 at 07:57:37PM +0200, Alex Vinokur wrote:
> >Hi,
> >
> >Behavior of printf and cout in a program below is different : cout prints nothing.
> >
> >What is wrong?
> >
> >===
At 06:58 AM 1/3/2004, John Maddock wrote:
>Beman,
>
>Here's the reply I got from the cygwin list on this, can you reply with
>details of your system and the fact that it fails there?
John's fstream.cpp test program fails on my Win XP SP 1 system. I've
reinstalled cygwin gcc and mingw components fr
Hallo Karl,
Am Samstag, 3. Januar 2004 um 09:47 schriebst du:
> I'm trying to build a stand alone libbz2 compiled with -mno-cygwin so I
> grabbed the source from http://sources.redhat.com/bzip2/ rather than using
> the version that comes with Cygwin.
I don't see the -mno-cygwin flag in the outpu
I'm trying to build a stand alone libbz2 compiled with -mno-cygwin so I
grabbed the source from http://sources.redhat.com/bzip2/ rather than using
the version that comes with Cygwin.
Running make produces warnings and one of the tests fails. Below is the
output using gcc 3.3.1-3.
-Karl
> $
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