Hi, Kyle a écrit : > I had a system set up to compile autopackages, however, I couldn't find > enough testers, and I had to use a really old version of glibc so that > other people with distro's ten versions too old could run them, so I
How was that possible? SDL has dependencies for instance on alsa and Xorg/XFree, so even a mostly-static binary will have some dependency problems. > packages at night (Eastern Standard Time) (yay for VMWare!) if I knew of > a crom like system for Windows. I think visual studio lets you compile At least under Windows 2000, whether it is something that is installed by default or not, you can find in Start->Programs->Accessories something (live translation, I don't know the English equivalent) called "Planed tasks", and then you can set some information about the frequency (not sure of the precision). But it seems that what yekcim had in mind was rather *several* targets at a time (say, Ubuntu, Debian and Fedora for instance), which is quite a lot more harder to setup. By the way, I've added a small sketch of a guide for cross-compilation using mingw here: http://www.wormux.org/wiki/howto/en/cross-compile_using_mingw.php Best regards, Kurosu _______________________________________________ Wormux-dev mailing list Wormux-dev@gna.org https://mail.gna.org/listinfo/wormux-dev