On 16/02/11 15:59, Greg Stark wrote:
On Wed, Feb 16, 2011 at 2:43 AM, Mark Kirkwood
<mark.kirkw...@catalyst.net.nz> wrote:
What's this libbsd then eh? Sure enough it is this guy that defines these
symbols. So it is the way it is being built on the Ubuntu (or Debian)
platform.
Oh, for what it's worth there are several different libedits out there
with various related heritages. It's possible you're looking at two
completely different packages.
On Debian /usr/share/doc/<package>/README.Debian is supposed to say
where the upstream source was.
Yeah, good point:
$ dpkg -S /usr/lib/libedit.so.2
libedit2: /usr/lib/libedit.so.2
$ aptitude show libedit2
Package: libedit2
State: installed
Automatically installed: no
Version: 2.11-20080614-1build1
Priority: standard
Section: libs
Maintainer: Ubuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-disc...@lists.ubuntu.com>
Uncompressed Size: 201k
Depends: libbsd0 (>= 0.0), libc6 (>= 2.11), libncurses5 (>= 5.6+20071006-3)
Description: BSD editline and history libraries
The editline library provides generic line editing and history functions.
It slightly resembles GNU readline
Homepage:
http://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-release-5-0/src/lib/libedit/
--
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers