On Thu, Mar 06, 2014 at 05:09:18PM -0500, David Conrad wrote:
>On Tue, Mar 4, 2014 at 6:44 PM, Wm. David Bentlage wrote:
>> I occasionally get errors like the following and don't understand
>> what's going on. Is there a way to correct this?
>>
>> user@machine /w/dir
>> $ tail -n1 safe*i | grep -i
On 3/6/2014 2:25 PM, Tom Bujok wrote:
My question is: could these network drives cause the git.exe to be
slow and if yes, what's the best way to umount/disable these network
drives so that my prompt is quick again.
Unless the network drives are in your path before any Cygwin executables
that yo
On Tue, Mar 4, 2014 at 6:44 PM, Wm. David Bentlage wrote:
> I occasionally get errors like the following and don't understand
> what's going on. Is there a way to correct this?
>
> user@machine /w/dir
> $ tail -n1 safe*i | grep -i root | wc
> 6 24 534
> 70 [main] bash 7012 sig_
On 3/3/2014 10:05 AM, Corinna Vinschen wrote:
On Mar 3 08:55, Charles Wilson wrote:
On 2/26/2014 5:07 AM, Corinna Vinschen wrote:
Weird, I was pretty sure we already have an /etc/shells file installed
by default. Apparently not. So, shan't we add one?
/bin/sh
/bin/bash
/bin/dash
Hi guys
I am using the newest version of cygwin (1.7.28) on my Lenovo Windows
7 machine (4 cores, SSD disk, 12GB RAM)
I have installed oh-my-zsh and the prompt is extremely slow.
I've executed a simple test "time git branch" in a folder with a
sample git repo - and it takes around 100 - 150 ms - w
I have fiddled around in my cygwin to get ledger installed with not
much luck. When I got it running it gives not outpu, The same goes for
bash scripts as well as taskwarrior. I tried to reinstall some cygwin
components, but that did not work. The scripts run but gives no output and
no errors.
Any
If it is of any use, the versions I have installed,
bash/sh 4.1.10(4), have the same length and differ
in two byte positions, by one bit in each case.
These differences may just reflect the different
name or a slightly different time at which the .exe
was constructed as part of a build process.
Folks,
sorry for the delay, I was sick in the meantime. Now, I try to
summarize all my finding in the hopes that bash package maintainer can
pick up from here.
When starting a terminal on my Windows 7 64 bit system $PATH contains
a dot at the end. The dot is not present in my Windows environment
On 06/03/2014 13:17, Irfan Adilovic wrote:
On Wed, Mar 5, 2014 at 3:05 PM, Corinna Vinschen wrote:
On Mar 5 06:52, Eric Blake wrote:
On 03/05/2014 03:45 AM, Irfan Adilovic wrote:
If it is recognized that the executable was compiled against a
different sized struct tm, how would you instruct
Hi,
It seems recent versions of setup-x86.exe exit before the installation is
complete. Without the --no-admin option, the main installation is run as a
child process, and the parent doesn't wait for the child to complete. This
can cause a bit of a problem for other installers that install Cygwin
On Wed, Mar 5, 2014 at 3:05 PM, Corinna Vinschen wrote:
> On Mar 5 06:52, Eric Blake wrote:
>> On 03/05/2014 03:45 AM, Irfan Adilovic wrote:
>> > If it is recognized that the executable was compiled against a
>> > different sized struct tm, how would you instruct cygwin1.dll code not
>> > to write
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