Nicolas, At 08:13 2003-02-06, Nicolas Christin wrote:
That would be a conservative approach. Clearly if there are no text mode mounts, text mode will not be in effect.On Thu, 6 Feb 2003, Max Bowsher wrote:> Nicolas Christin wrote: > > > > How can I detect what text type was chosen at install time? (So that I > > can appropriately set/unset my cygwin-unix-type variable.) > > man mount Max, thanks. OK... I had actually checked that, but it didn't come to me as straightforward how to use it for my particular problem. Can I just assume that if I don't see any "textmode" field in the mount table, then everything is fine?
But note that you must also check the CYGWIN environment variable, though, for the "binmod" / "nobinmode" option. Refer to <http://cygwin.com/cygwin-ug-net/using-cygwinenv.html> for details.
If you want to be more refined about the determination you make in your script, you'll have to analyze the mount table as reported by the "mount" command and emulate Cygwin's algorithm for determining which mount point is used to access a given file (name).
More specifically, does something of the kind: #!/bin/sh # test we're in binmode mount | grep textmode >/dev/null 2>&1 if [ "$?" -eq "0" ]; then # found text modes - probably bad bail(); else proceed(); fi; would do? (I don't have a DOS-type installed Cygwin available at the moment, so I'm doing this blind and can't test it...) Thanks again, -- Nicolas
Randall Schulz
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