I might not be remembering correctly, but I don't ever
remember seeing an error message from cvs.  I would run
"cvs update -P -d" successfully (ie. no errors) and
then the build would fail.
-Dug


Sam Ruby/Raleigh/IBM@IBMUS on 05/30/2001 07:26:22 AM

Please respond to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
cc:
Subject:  Re: Release v2.2



Doug Davis wrote:
>
> Glen - remove that sample dir and re-extract it from
>       cvs.  As Sanjiva said that _will_ fix it (I had
>       the same problem myself a while ago - a bug in
>       cvs if you ask me).

>From what I can see, there is no record of the lower case names on the
server.  Which implies to me that somebody manually updated the cvs
repository directly.

If that is the case, then cvs is seeing a file with the wrong case on you
hard drive and, not knowing how it got there and knowing that placing one
with the correct case there on a Windows file system would result in data
loss, produces an error message and leaves it alone.

- Sam Ruby



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