I need more information about the mapped drive errors. See below. - Dennis
PS: I am pleased that you find the level of documentation useful. -----Original Message----- From: Peter Kelly [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Friday, January 9, 2015 08:59 To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [REVIEW REQUEST] External Scripts (was RE: My work in january.) I’ve just tested this on Windows 7 (SP1), and ran into the following error message: An unexpected error is keeping you from copying the file. If you continue to receive this error, you can use the error code to search for help with this problem. Error 0x80004005: Unspecified error zconf.h Type: C/C+ Header Date modified: 5/13/2013 1:57 PM Size: 15.1 KB This happened for the following files: zconf.h zlib.h zdll.lib zlib.def example_d.exe minigzip_d.exe Now this was when running the file from a mapped network drive - which I normally use for bulids, since I run Windows under VMWare on my mac (and VMWare’s own folder sharing support is painfully slow, so I use SMB file sharing from the mac side). So I instead tried copying the entire Corinthia repository onto the C drive (NTFS), and then extract_downloads.bat ran without problems. <orcmid> Do you have the console output up until the point these errors were reported? It appears that the problem occurs when unzipping the zlib128-dll.zip file to subfolder external\download\T\. This is normally the last one. Did any of the other extracts work? </orcmid> I did run into problems with the build where it was unable to find some files. It’s very late here and I’m about to call it a night, so I’ll have a look into both problems on the weekend or early next week - as soon as I can find the time. <orcmid> On building the solution, I get 10 error messages, mainly stemming From some #include files not being locatable. It appears that the CMake condition on "Windows" is not working or there is something else happening in the generated Visual Studio projects. That is with a mingw64 build of CMake 3.0.0. I am going to retry with the native[?] Windows CMake 3.1.0 to see if there is any difference. After that, I will dig deeper into the projects to see if I can find exactly where the failed #include operations are happening. </orcmid> [ ... ]
