Hi Rob, Sorry to hear about the heat. Our lab airconditioner is currently broken, and I know how that is....
I haven't done any path searching in C, but a quick 'apropos path' shows 'glob()' and 'fnmatch()' functions which might be useful? T.C. ---- Wan Tat Chee (Lecturer) School of Computer Science, Univ. Science Malaysia, 11800 Minden, Penang, Malaysia. Rm.625 Ofc Ph: +604 653-3888 x 3617 NRG Lab Admin: +604 659-4757 Rm.601-E Ofc Ph: +604 653-4396 Internet: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Web: http://nrg.cs.usm.my/~tcwan GPG Key : http://nrg.cs.usm.my/~tcwan/tcw_gpg-20030322.asc F'print : DCF2 B9B2 FA4D 1208 AD59 14CA 9A8F F54D B2C4 63C7 On Tue, 10 Jun 2003, Rob Shortt wrote: > Rob Shortt wrote: > > What is happening here is that I forgot that av[1] isn't always a > > relative or absolute path to the app in question but sometimes needs to > > be found in your PATH. I will take a look at this immediately. > > Ok so my Freevo box just crashed horribly and won't boot up all the way > without a kernel panic now even when trying older kernels. I think I > may have a heat problem. :( > > By the way, is there a dead simple C function to find something in your > PATH? I am definately not a C guy. :) > > -Rob > > > > > ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.net email is sponsored by: Etnus, makers of TotalView, The best thread debugger on the planet. Designed with thread debugging features you've never dreamed of, try TotalView 6 free at www.etnus.com. _______________________________________________ Freevo-devel mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/freevo-devel
