On Jul 13, 2006, at 9:39 AM, Rich Adamson wrote:
<snip>
Okay. There has been about 20 or so (pure guess on the actual number)
patches applied to the v1.2 code in svn in the last few weeks. I don't
have a clue whether any of those patches related to queues, but would
have to guess that some do.
For those that are running v1.2, it certainly is not difficult to
execute "make install" from within the asterisk source directory and
pick up those updates/patches.
I don't think that will add the patches, will it? I thought this builds
from the already present sources?
As I understand it, the 1.2.9.1 distro is a snapshot of the svn v1.2
source code (on some specific date/time), and that executing the "make
update" simply applies those patches that will be going into 1.2.10
(or whatever the next stable release number happens to be).
Doesn't "make update" look at CVS?
So, by running 1.2.9.1 code, you're running something that is known to
contain bugs. And, by not doing an update, its essentially suggesting
that bug fixes are not important enough to apply them.
I would love to see a simple explanation of how to update to the
latest, including patches. Although I am not using queues, I have
wondered about this ever since the change over to SVN, and this seems a
good place to ask.
Thanks for any help explaining,
Marty
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