it.
On Thu, 9 May 2019 at 09:30, Michael Richter wrote:
> New_Version:
> 0d481726efdeaf7e1e425da5db82af9042217eaa59ca689e3a253cefdbb93a77
> ERROR: [CPU/STM32F103RC_buildnumber] is different on disk compared to the
> repository
> NOTICE: Repository version of [CPU/STM32F103RC_buildnumber] st
New_Version:
0d481726efdeaf7e1e425da5db82af9042217eaa59ca689e3a253cefdbb93a77
ERROR: [CPU/STM32F103RC_buildnumber] is different on disk compared to the
repository
NOTICE: Repository version of [CPU/STM32F103RC_buildnumber] stored in
[file-61e47e1f48a9c5ea]
ERROR: [CPU/STM32L051C8_buildnumber] is
se fsl wrapper as a standard filter?
>
> You can get a sense of what the repo extension does from this wiki page:
> http://chiselapp.com/user/kiatoa/repository/fsl/wiki?name=Usage
>
> Thanks,
>
> Matt
> -=-
>
> On Mon, Apr 25, 2016 at 7:48 AM, Michael Richter <ttm
I know that every time I mention this I get silently, perhaps even
hostilely, ignored, but really guys, why not just use fsl for your
customization needs? Colourizing output is in the cookbook:
http://fossil.0branch.com/fsl/wiki?name=Cookbook, along with lots of other
nifty tricks like aliasing,
Trying to open the same repository under a Linux system (fossil version
1.33 [5b456cfa6b]) gives me this: "[1]9388 segmentation fault fossil
open /path/to/Joystick.fossil"
On 15 April 2016 at 11:31, Michael Richter <ttmrich...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Platform: Windows 10.
>
Platform: Windows 10.
Fossil version: 1.34 [62dcb00e68]
After making a few changes to a project (IAR Embedded Workbench for ARM)
and committing them on a feature branch, I tried to check out the main
development branch. The result was a hard crash. My repository is now in
a state where I can't
Here I go again reminding people that if you just want short versions of
commands, aliases for common command operations with specific switches,
etc. that http://fossil.0branch.com/fsl/home has a solution for this
already that's been available for years now.
On 26 February 2016 at 10:57, Ross
The key wording there is *within the repository* tree.
It doesn't change the file system, only the naming of the files, etc. in
the repository. Whether this is desired or correct behaviour is … an area
of frequent discussion.
My own response to that discussion is to use the fsl wrapper (
On 27 July 2014 11:04, Eric Rubin-Smith eas@gmail.com wrote:
Fossil *could* support export to JIRA+git in particular, for example, by
providing a tool that (a) exports to JIRA's supported JSON import format,
(b) collects the mapping from the fossil ticket IDs to the JIRA ticket
IDs, then
Where do I find the variables and commands Fossil exposes to TH documented?
--
Perhaps people don't believe this, but throughout all of the discussions
of entering China our focus has really been what's best for the Chinese
people. It's not been about our revenue or profit or whatnot.
--Sergey
On 15 August 2013 21:23, John Long codeb...@inbox.lv wrote:
Hi, is it possible to ignore UNIX executables? I want to do an addr on a
directory tree but I don't know how to tell fossil not to track the
binaries
since they have no naming pattern. Until now I've been living with it but
it
is
On 15 August 2013 21:23, John Long codeb...@inbox.lv wrote:
Hi, is it possible to ignore UNIX executables? I want to do an addr on a
directory tree but I don't know how to tell fossil not to track the
binaries
since they have no naming pattern. Until now I've been living with it but
it
is
On 21 February 2013 04:57, Lluís Batlle i Rossell vi...@viric.name wrote:
1) there were a way to clone+checkout at once into a subdirectory:
fossil clonedir http://blabla.org/ blabla
# ^ It creates blabla/, blabla/.repository.fossil, and in it, checks out
# the .repository.fossil, for
You should have set your check-in date to something ridiculously early.
(One of the options when creating the repo for pushing.) Since you didn't,
shun instead the initial check-in. When I did that to my hosted app it
worked fine.
On 17 February 2013 22:09, jim Schimpf jim.schi...@gmail.com
On 31 December 2012 15:53, Edward Berner e...@bernerfam.com wrote:
fossil info calls it project-code but it seems to be the same thing
that fossil new and fossil clone call project-id.
Waitwhat? My version of Fossil (This is fossil version 1.25 [558a17a686]
2012-12-22 13:48:31 UTC) doesn't
On 31 December 2012 17:27, Edward Berner e...@bernerfam.com wrote:
Waitwhat? My version of Fossil (This is fossil version 1.25 [558a17a686]
2012-12-22 13:48:31 UTC) doesn't show anything about project-id for
fossil new/clone.
What do you get when you create a test repository? It should, I
If I had written a ten-page post explaining in excruciating detail
what rebase is, why it matters, and how to adapt it to the Fossil
philosophy, who -but who!- would have read that first post?
I, for one, would have. I wouldn't necessarily have agreed, mind, because
the disagreement may be
I'd just like to add a link to a Git user who *doesn't* like rebasing:
http://paul.stadig.name/2010/12/thou-shalt-not-lie-git-rebase-ammend.html
On 31 December 2012 07:26, Michael Richter ttmrich...@gmail.com wrote:
If I had written a ten-page post explaining in excruciating detail
what
Is there any way to execute SQL statements from the command line using
fossil sqlite3? The docs for
thishttp://www.fossil-scm.org/xfer/help?cmd=sqlite3are a bit skimpy
(to say the least). Like what are the
*?OPTIONS?* mentioned, precisely?
What I'm specifically trying to accomplish is to
I'm pretty sure that rebase or its equivalents will never be a part of
Fossil. Given that there are tools out there (like Git) that feature this
functionality that some (and I stress it's only *some*) users want, perhaps
this following question is to practical but … why not use Git, the tool
that
On 30 December 2012 12:56, Nico Williams n...@cryptonector.com wrote:
What is it about rebase that causes so many to miss the idea of a
rebase that is NOT destructive because it creates a new branch instead
of doing a destructive change to an existing branch?
I don't know. You won't explain
On 30 December 2012 13:02, Nico Williams n...@cryptonector.com wrote:
On Sat, Dec 29, 2012 at 10:57 PM, Mike Meyer m...@mired.org wrote:
So, for the third time, can you describe your proposed new feature
*without* saying the words git or rebase.
No: it's too much work, and many people
On 30 December 2012 13:23, Nico Williams n...@cryptonector.com wrote:
A rebase operation takes a branch (typically the current one) and
two commits (oldbase and newbase) in the repository and then a)
computes the set of commits that are in the branch since oldbase
then b) creates a new line
On 30 December 2012 14:00, Nico Williams n...@cryptonector.com wrote:
And why do they do this? I kinda/sorta get the mechanism. I just don't
see
the motivation. (And upstream maintainers insist upon this is not
motivation, it's just moving the question of motivation around.)
Because
On 30 December 2012 14:19, Nico Williams n...@cryptonector.com wrote:
There are differing philosophies here. Some say it is important to
present a clean, linear narrative of what took place - a narrative
that is easy to follow and easy to understand. Others say that it is
more important
On 25 December 2012 07:12, Mike Meyer m...@mired.org wrote:
for u in $DEVS ADMINS $READERS
do
# create user name from company mail address, password is PWname.
fs new $u $u...@company.com PW$u -R $REPO
done
for dev in $DEVS
do
# Set up developers
fs cap $dev v -R $REPO
http://facepalm.org
I feel stupid.
On 26 December 2012 02:23, Michael L. Barrow mlbar...@barrow.me wrote:
On 12/25/2012 12:44 AM, Michael Richter wrote:
This leaves me doubly confused. Neither of these command lines works for
me. There is no fossil cap I can see. (Fossil whines about
On 19 December 2012 07:33, Mike Meyer m...@mired.org wrote:
for u in $DEVS ADMINS $READERS
do
# create user name from company mail address, password is PWname.
fs new $u $u...@company.com PW$u -R $REPO
done
for dev in $DEVS
do
# Set up developers
fs cap $dev v -R $REPO
done
I
You know, for someone using a tool that hasn't paid for it, you have a real
tone of overweening entitlement. Perhaps you need to look up the
definitions involved in free software and open source software. You
may wish, in particular, to pay attention to the portions of it that
involve how to get
Do you two need a room? If so, there's a local so-called love hotel I
can book for you in two-hour slots.
On 18 December 2012 13:00, Chad Perrin c...@apotheon.net wrote:
On Sun, Dec 16, 2012 at 05:02:23PM -0800, Joe Mistachkin wrote:
Chad Perrin wrote:
If you use bleeding edge
On 29 October 2012 02:44, K k...@lightpowered.org wrote:
Literally my first day using Fossil I ran into a problem, the wiki naming
limitation. This doesn't seem too obscure to not warrant a tweak to the
code.
The obscure part isn't the naming limitation, it's the desire to have
page names
I'm going to ask what is probably a remarkably stupid question, but what is
an ad-unit? I can't find mention of it in a(n admittedly cursory)
look-over of the docs.
On 10 August 2012 03:11, Richard Hipp d...@sqlite.org wrote:
On Thu, Aug 9, 2012 at 2:50 PM, Sergey Sfeli
I'm having a weird problem serving up files in my /doc/tip/*. Some of the
files I access through that tree are source files. If the source files are
foo.m (Mercury source), fossil serves them up as MIME type text/html and it
gets displayed nicely in my browser (Firefox 14). If, however, the
On 8 March 2012 03:18, Gour g...@atmarama.net wrote:
I already voiced a release engineer's reluctance to pursue Fossil due
to the restriction of '[]'s.
I'm with computers since time of Apple's IIe and never encountered need
to have filenames with '[]'s.
Never worked with VMS then, I'm
sites that I know for certain work to
avoid the possibility of accidentally catching up on a proxied URL pattern.
On 12 October 2011 20:40, Michael Richter ttmrich...@gmail.com wrote:
On 12 October 2011 19:01, Richard Hipp d...@sqlite.org wrote:
On Wed, Oct 12, 2011 at 12:20 AM, Michael Richter
OK, got tired of waiting for the moderation, so reposting without the
attached repository. I can mail the repository in question to anybody who
wants to look at it.
-- Forwarded message --
From: Michael Richter ttmrich...@gmail.com
Date: 12 October 2011 12:20
Subject: Login seems
On 12 October 2011 19:01, Richard Hipp d...@sqlite.org wrote:
On Wed, Oct 12, 2011 at 12:20 AM, Michael Richter ttmrich...@gmail.comwrote:
Using a recent version of fossil (Fossil version 1.19 [6092935ff2]
2011-10-05 02:03:04) I can't log in to any repository at all (including
repos I've had
On 15 September 2011 22:43, Ron Aaron r...@ronware.org wrote:
On 09/15/2011 05:34 PM, Richard Hipp wrote:
Using the birthday paradox, I calculated last year that for the
SQLite repository, if it continues to change and evolve at the same
rate it has for the previous 10 years, will
On 13 August 2011 07:31, Joerg Sonnenberger jo...@britannica.bec.de wrote:
(if you can figure out how to mark _FOSSIL_ as hidden on Windows,
that would be good too).
The ATTRIB command isn't working for you?
--
Perhaps people don't believe this, but throughout all of the discussions of
On 14 June 2011 15:57, Stephan Beal sgb...@googlemail.com wrote:
On Tue, Jun 14, 2011 at 1:27 AM, Richard Hipp d...@sqlite.org wrote:
If you have a way other than autoconf to generate a universal build script
that runs on any unix machine without special software installed, then that
will be
*A Modest Proposal*
*
*
The problems with the auto* tools are myriad and well-documented in the grey
hairs and bald pates of many a poor soul who's had to put them to use.
Other environments suggested -- CMake, QMake, Jam, et al -- suffer from
assorted platform problems including (but not limited
Thanks, Richard. That cleared things up.
On 29 March 2011 20:25, Richard Hipp d...@sqlite.org wrote:
--
Perhaps people don't believe this, but throughout all of the discussions of
entering China our focus has really been what's best for the Chinese people.
It's not been about our revenue or
Thanks for all the friendly help I got on this issue and for the near
saintlike patience Richard showed.
The problem has been solved. I blame China. (I'm only being a little
bit facetious in this.)
Something Richard asked -- about a proxy that filters anything with
timeline in the URL -- got
More data on this problem. It's now happening to me on Firefox. A repo
that was working fine for me with Firefox for several days (but not Chrome
-- no repo ever works with Chrome) has suddenly developed the same disease
using Firefox. I'm logged in. I can see everything clearly. Except the
And more data: It seems Firefox is just plain tainted now -- I can't access
the timeline view on ANY fossil repository, just like the problem I had for
Chrome.
On 24 March 2011 00:45, Michael Richter ttmrich...@gmail.com wrote:
More data on this problem. It's now happening to me on Firefox
in the
cookie management?
On 24 March 2011 00:47, Michael Richter ttmrich...@gmail.com wrote:
And more data: It seems Firefox is just plain tainted now -- I can't access
the timeline view on ANY fossil repository, just like the problem I had for
Chrome.
On 24 March 2011 00:45, Michael Richter
And another data point. I can't see the timeline SETTINGS from the admin
panel. So I log in. I click on Admin. I click on Timeline. I'm thrown to
the login page.
On 24 March 2011 01:01, Michael Richter ttmrich...@gmail.com wrote:
And yet more data. If I turn on history view for user
browser have any effect?
It should be an easy way to avoid any local cookies or extensions (in
Chrome) from interfering with the process.
On 23 March 2011 16:47, Michael Richter ttmrich...@gmail.com wrote:
And more data: It seems Firefox is just plain tainted now -- I can't
access the timeline
term. As a long term solution, however, it stinks. :(
On 24 March 2011 01:05, Michael Richter ttmrich...@gmail.com wrote:
And another data point. I can't see the timeline SETTINGS from the admin
panel. So I log in. I click on Admin. I click on Timeline. I'm thrown to
the login page
On 24 March 2011 01:17, Douglas Fitzmaurice dig...@gmail.com wrote:
Are you able to make a Wireshark capture of the traffic from one of these
requests?
There is a tutorial on capturing using Ubuntu here:
http://www.howtoforge.com/network-analysis-with-wireshark-on-ubuntu-9.10
(Apologies if
On 24 March 2011 01:14, Richard Hipp d...@sqlite.org wrote:
Do you have some strange proxy that is rewriting URLs that contain the
keyword timeline in them?
Not to my knowledge, no. I mean I have a proxy I use to get around the
Great Firewall, but I'm pretty sure that timeline isn't in my
On 24 March 2011 04:05, Joshua Paine jos...@letterblock.com wrote:
On 03/23/2011 01:01 PM, Michael Richter wrote:
I'm not sure why the bit rot with Firefox happened
Did you just upgrade? 4.0 final came out in the last couple days.
Nope. It's still 3.6.15 here.
We really need
Oops. I didn't see this, Richard. Sorry. I'll get this set up now and
send you the results.
Once I figure out how to get Tcl working. :)
On 17 March 2011 01:21, Richard Hipp d...@sqlite.org wrote:
On Wed, Mar 16, 2011 at 11:30 AM, Michael Richter ttmrich...@gmail.comwrote:
OK
On 21 March 2011 22:21, Richard Hipp d...@sqlite.org wrote:
On Mon, Mar 21, 2011 at 10:01 AM, Michael Richter ttmrich...@gmail.comwrote:
OK, perhaps I'm being as thick as a whale omlette here, but I cannot get
this to work at all.
First attempt: relay-to was set to www.fossil-scm.org:80
On 21 March 2011 23:30, Richard Hipp d...@sqlite.org wrote:
On Mon, Mar 21, 2011 at 11:10 AM, Michael Richter ttmrich...@gmail.comwrote:
Try running the experiment here: http://www.sqlite.org/debug1
OK, I can log in and see the timeline properly here. Are you running this
through CGI
The ticket
http://fossil-scm.org/index.html/tktview/305143bd876f693f446f78d12dbef143c46eec58
is
moving into show-stopper territory for me. I'm trying to share a
repository's code through fossil to fossil non-users. The inability to log
in in the timeline views means no ability to bundle up
I'm trying to do some stuff with base urls in my header and I can't seem to
get it to work. Part of the problem is that $home is a relative address.
It occurs to me that I have absolutely no idea what all the $variables are
in Fossil. Is there a list of them anywhere (I couldn't find one in the
On Fri, Jan 28, 2011 at 11:36 AM, Michael Richter ttmrich...@gmail.comwrote:
I'm trying to do some stuff with base urls in my header and I can't seem
to get it to work. Part of the problem is that $home is a relative address.
It occurs to me that I have absolutely no idea what all
As another option on this there's a pretty good JavaScript-based code
colorizer out there. The colorizer could be built-in for common languages
and could be pointed at the repository itself for including project-specific
language configurations with ease. This would trump calling external
On 24 September 2010 03:20, Richard Hipp d...@sqlite.org wrote:
The deconstruct method is fossil's equivalent to fast-export. Why does
this not meet your needs and what exactly are you looking for? Are you
wanting an export in the git-specific format? How could we export wiki and
tickets
and c) this something doesn't survive a configuration reset all.
That's pretty slim pickings for debugging. :(
On 19 September 2010 10:33, Michael Richter ttmrich...@gmail.com wrote:
Dammit. Scratch that. I don't have the backup anymore. :(
On 19 September 2010 10:21, Michael Richter
I've got a fossil repository I can't touch because of something being
reported as a redirect loop. Firefox just gives a user-friendly error
with no useful information. Chrome gives a bit more:
This webpage has a redirect loop.
The webpage at
AM, Michael Richter ttmrich...@gmail.comwrote:
I've got a fossil repository I can't touch because of something being
reported as a redirect loop. Firefox just gives a user-friendly error
with no useful information.
With fossil ui running, try manually moving to the setup pages by typing
It occurs to me that I still have the broken repo as a backup. Would you be
interested in seeing it?
On 19 September 2010 07:48, Richard Hipp d...@sqlite.org wrote:
On Sat, Sep 18, 2010 at 7:23 PM, Michael Richter ttmrich...@gmail.comwrote:
OK, so I fixed it shortly before crashing
Dammit. Scratch that. I don't have the backup anymore. :(
On 19 September 2010 10:21, Michael Richter ttmrich...@gmail.com wrote:
It occurs to me that I still have the broken repo as a backup. Would you
be interested in seeing it?
On 19 September 2010 07:48, Richard Hipp d...@sqlite.org
*$ fossil setting*
...
clearsign
...
pgp-command
...
No setting which means, I assume, defaults.
On 2 August 2010 06:22, Richard Hipp d...@sqlite.org wrote:
What are your:
fossil setting clearsign
fossil setting pgp-command
On Sat, Jul 31, 2010 at 12:19 PM, Michael Richter ttmrich
Ah! That could be the problem then.
On 2 August 2010 10:17, Joshua Paine jos...@letterblock.com wrote:
Little while ago fossil stopped signing by default--Richard concluded it
was confusing and/or irritating to more people than liked it. Should work
again if you turn it on (by GUI or command
, Michael Richter wrote:
Looking more into the skinning issue, it looks to me like the file
skins.c
contains a bunch of stuff that could be generated trivially from a
script of
some sort. Is there any interest in me making the skinning system more
flexible so it's easier to add a new skin
The skins available in the default build of fossil seem to be mislabelled.
When I select the one labelled plain grey, no logo, I get a plain grey
theme with a big lighter-grey box that occupies 3/4 of the top
(left-aligned) with a logo in the middle. khaki, no logo is what it says
on the box.
Looking more into the skinning issue, it looks to me like the file skins.c
contains a bunch of stuff that could be generated trivially from a script of
some sort. Is there any interest in me making the skinning system more
flexible so it's easier to add a new skin by basically just checking in
On 13 July 2010 00:35, Sergey Volkov s...@mooby.org wrote:
12.07.2010 19:05, Joshua Paine пишет:
I have needed this also, and I do: `touch empty_dir/dir; fossil add
empty_dir`
So to add empty directory i need to create any empty file in it?
for example
mkdir empty_dir
touch
OK, this *really* is the last thing before bed. I've documented the new
build system (somewhat) here:
http://fossil-scm.org/index.html/wiki?name=New+Build+Documentation
On 10 July 2010 01:54, Michael Richter ttmrich...@gmail.com wrote:
Last thing before I go to bed, I've tagged the relevant
I'd like to re-engineer the Makefile approach in fossil so that it's easier
to work out what needs to be put in place for any given platform. Is there
enough interest in this that it's worth doing the work in my private branch
for inspection?
--
Perhaps people don't believe this, but throughout
compiler choices configurable through simple
environment variable settings or the like with support for these out of the
box:
- gcc (obviously)
- clang
- Visual Studio?
On 7 July 2010 18:34, Paul Ruizendaal p...@planet.nl wrote:
On Wed, 7 Jul 2010 16:34:31 +0800, Michael Richter ttmrich...@gmail.com
On 30 June 2010 21:24, Joshua Paine jos...@letterblock.com wrote:
On 06/30/2010 01:52 AM, Ruslan Popov wrote:
When I use git I like its feature to do 'more' showing huge diff.
Especially it would be convinient for fossil on Windows.
`fossil diff | more` Windows doesn't have much of a
On 28 June 2010 21:20, Kevin Greiner grein...@gmail.com wrote:
For a few files I see the following error:
fossil: filename contains illegal characters: prep_20100113[1] clean/
135816_0001.ps
I understand it's the square brackets that are causing this error but not
why this is by design.
On 29 June 2010 02:18, Eric e...@deptj.eu wrote:
[] are there for the same reason as * and ?:
~ $ ls -d p[lu]*
play public_html
Ah. I was unaware of that expansion. I always used something like p{l,u}*
in those situations.
--
Perhaps people don't believe this, but throughout all of the
On 25 June 2010 21:34, Michal Suchanek hramr...@centrum.cz wrote:
Perhaps fossil should have a system encoding which it would get from
the environment (locales, windows codepage) and mark all commit
messages with it.
I vote that this is an extraordinarily bad idea.
Fossil is a *distributed*
What does this do that *fossil merge trunk* from my branch in
*ttmrichter* doesn't
do?
On 24 June 2010 16:31, altufa...@mail.com wrote:
Well, you have custom changes (A, B, C) in a branch and you want to
keep up with latest changes happening in trunk - at frequent intervals.
What rebase does
On 16 June 2010 05:41, ghiù pistacc...@gmail.com wrote:
Long story short, I downloaded the latest build for MacOSX and put it in
/usr/local/bin/. I run without a problem fossil new test and it created a
new archive.
I then tried fossil ui and I got a not within an open checkout. Now,
every
Very nice and exactly the kind of thing Fossil needs.
On 29 May 2010 18:20, Jim Schimpf jim.schi...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
I've been working on this for a while and thought it might be useful
for the group. This is a PDF for a new user of Fossil to show them how to
use it in a simple
On 6 February 2010 05:16, D. Richard Hipp d...@hwaci.com wrote:
You know, 15 years ago, I could have done (and did do) a slick looking
interface like this using a couple dozen lines of easy to understand
and easy to modify Tcl/Tk code in a canvas widget. Now, I have to
write hundreds or
On 1 February 2010 23:19, D. Richard Hipp d...@hwaci.com wrote:
I do *not* want to turn Fossil into a general-purpose web server and
replacement for Apache. That is not its purpose. We have to draw the
line somewhere, and I propose to draw the line here.
Absolutely agreed. The feature is
2010/1/31 D. Richard Hipp d...@hwaci.com
There was another recent request for the ability to serve multiple
repositories off of the same TCP port without using a web server. The
current syntax to launch a stand-alone server is:
fossil server REPOSITORYFILE
Suppose we expanded this
2010/1/25 D. Richard Hipp d...@hwaci.com
I'm not sure what was going wrong. But hopefully it is fixed now.
It works now on all the platforms I have access to.
___
fossil-users mailing list
fossil-users@lists.fossil-scm.org
2010/1/21 Daniel Carrera dcarr...@gmail.com
When you clone A to B, a note is made in B that you cloned from A. So
when you are working in B and you push or pull or sync it knows that the
endpoint of that operation is A.
I think that's bad. Darcs doesn't do that, and I would venture to
You need to have zlib built and the library in your library path. Google
for zlib and download it, compile it and place it in your lib directory for
MinGW/MSYS.
2010/1/21 Simon Horton sij.hor...@gmail.com
Hello,
I have fossil source code: fossil-src-20091220213451
I have setup Ming and
2010/1/21 Daniel Carrera dcarr...@gmail.com
Michael Richter wrote:
mich...@isolde:~/junk/B$ darcs push
darcs failed: Not a repository: /home/michael/junk/A
(/home/michael/junk/A/_darcs/inventory: openBinaryFile: does not exist
(No such file or directory))
Oops. So much for equal
2010/1/8 Stephan Beal sgb...@googlemail.com
_in theory_, the largest item which can portably be committed is somewhere
around 1.7GB. That number comes from:
a) max memory space for 32-bit platforms = ~4GB. In my experience,
3.6-3.8GB is the max.
b) fossil does its diffs in memory, meaning 2
2009/12/9 chi ml-fos...@qiao.in-berlin.de
I don't get it. We never had to number the list ourselves.
What was wrong with :
Numbered list
0 Number one
0 Number two
0 Number three
It gives you a list that looks like:
0. Number one
0. Number
I like it a lot. Renumbering lists was always a hassle.
2009/12/9 altufa...@mail.com
Me like it too.
- Altu
-Original Message-
From: Wilson, Ronald rwils...@harris.com
To: fossil-users@lists.fossil-scm.org
Sent: Wed, Dec 9, 2009 6:54 am
Subject: Re: [fossil-users] Numbered
And with this you lose the interoperability of Fossil repositories.
Go team.
2009/11/29 Jeremy Cowgar jer...@cowgar.com
For those that would like a real human formatting language it would be
worth
a dependency. For those that prefer to use HTML can simply not link in the
library.
#ifdef
2009/11/29 Jeremy Cowgar jer...@cowgar.com
It has been mentioned that there will be complaining and arguing to what
format to choose and yet there has been none, only those who dislike a
format *making assumptions* as to what will happen.
In other news, irony is my very favourite thing in
Are you kidding Richard? Unicode is only 8 years old as a standard. It'll
be at least another 20 before people finally get it (semi-)right.
2009/11/2 D. Richard Hipp d...@hwaci.com
On Nov 2, 2009, at 3:05 AM, altufa...@mail.com wrote:
Hi DRH,
Check-in [0039b7813e] shows a rectangle
2009/11/2 D. Richard Hipp d...@hwaci.com
An image does not change color according to whether or not the link
has been visited. :-(
You can use a different image for visited links and unvisited links, though,
right?
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2009/11/2 D. Richard Hipp d...@hwaci.com
Are you kidding Richard? Unicode is only 8 years old as a
standard. It'll be at least another 20 before people finally get it
(semi-)right.
two rows of the table at
http://www.sqlite.org/draft/fileformat2.html#serialtype
works correctly but
Would not a *file* extension tell you about the format of the *file* and not
its *source*, keeping to the so-called principle of least astonishment?
2009/10/30 Wilson, Ronald rwils...@harris.com
So the .wiki extension does not a wiki page make? Surprising.
2009/10/24 altufa...@mail.com
Last time I used vi, it showed ^M at end of each line... does the new
version classify files as DOS/Unix and handles edits correctly?
vim (the most common vi variant in use nowadays) is incredibly
configurable. I guarantee you that there's an option for handling
I had a big problem going back in time to an older version of some code. In
brief I had to go fossil ui, find the version I wanted, copy the code from
the browser into my editor, save and commit because I could not get fossil
revert to do what I wanted. I've replicated something approximating my
2009/10/23 Ramon Ribó ram...@compassis.com
Seriously, how hard
is it to make a build environment with a script that modifies what should
be
modified on checkout? I don't see the extreme problems here with fossil
update followed by bin/convert where the latter is a script specific
to
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