Am 30.01.2023 um 03:35 schrieb Eliot Moss via Cygwin:
On 1/30/2023 4:22 AM, Franz Fehringer via Cygwin wrote:
Hi all,
Is there any Cygwin package providing the iopl et al. routines?
Google uncovers an ioperm package but that seems to be nothing current.
My goal is to compile
FreeBSD, NetBSD, and Linux all bumped their serial bit rates to support
500k(+500k)4000k, extending the rates to 3500k and 4000k, dropping 128k and
256k, renumbering the extended baud rate indices under Linux, effectively
changing the ABI for any previously compiled serial application.
See:
On 1/30/2023 4:22 AM, Franz Fehringer via Cygwin wrote:
Hi all,
Is there any Cygwin package providing the iopl et al. routines?
Google uncovers an ioperm package but that seems to be nothing current.
My goal is to compile https://github.com/pciutils/pciutils with Cygwin.
The package claims to
Hi Franz,
On Sun, Jan 29, 2023 at 06:18:43PM +0100, cygwin wrote:
> Am 27.01.2023 um 20:58 schrieb Brian Inglis via Cygwin:
> > On 2023-01-27 08:22, Franz Fehringer via Cygwin wrote:
> > > I have a question which seems quite natural but i cannot find
> > > anything useful using google & co.
> > >
On 2023-01-29 15:55, Ross Patterson wrote:
dash (or bash if required) native path with WD /var/log/ native path e.g.
%CYGWIN_ROOT%\bin\dash /usr/local/bin/sh WD %CYGWIN_ROOT%\var\log
I'm not understanding the use of `WD` here, can you clarify/elaborate?
Working Directory entry
At any
> dash (or bash if required) native path with WD /var/log/ native path e.g.
>
> %CYGWIN_ROOT%\bin\dash /usr/local/bin/sh WD %CYGWIN_ROOT%\var\log
I'm not understanding the use of `WD` here, can you clarify/elaborate?
At any rate, I forgot to mention that I also tried adding output
On 2023-01-29 10:18, Franz Fehringer via Cygwin wrote:
Am 27.01.2023 um 20:58 schrieb Brian Inglis via Cygwin:
On 2023-01-27 08:22, Franz Fehringer via Cygwin wrote:
I have a question which seems quite natural but i cannot find anything useful
using google & co.
My (business) notebook has two
Hi all,
Is there any Cygwin package providing the iopl et al. routines?
Google uncovers an ioperm package but that seems to be nothing current.
My goal is to compile https://github.com/pciutils/pciutils with Cygwin.
Thanks
Franz
--
Problem reports: https://cygwin.com/problems.html
Am 27.01.2023 um 20:58 schrieb Brian Inglis via Cygwin:
On 2023-01-27 08:22, Franz Fehringer via Cygwin wrote:
I have a question which seems quite natural but i cannot find anything
useful using google & co.
My (business) notebook has two graphics cards, one builtin identifying
as Intel Iris
The following packages have been uploaded to the Cygwin distribution:
* doxygen-1.9.6-1
* doxygen-doxywizard-1.9.6-1
* doxygen-latex-1.9.6-1
Doxygen is the de facto standard tool for generating documentation from
annotated C++ sources, but it also supports other popular programming languages
The following packages have been uploaded to the Cygwin distribution:
* doxygen-1.9.6-1
* doxygen-doxywizard-1.9.6-1
* doxygen-latex-1.9.6-1
Doxygen is the de facto standard tool for generating documentation from
annotated C++ sources, but it also supports other popular programming languages
We've received word from our data centre hosts that they will have a
network infrastructure outage 2023-01-31 (this coming Tuesday),
8am-12am-ish EST (UTC-5).
cygwin.com web and git will be unavailable during this outage.
The Cygwin setup program should continue to function (as if it can't
We've received word from our data centre hosts that they will have a
network infrastructure outage 2023-01-31 (this coming Tuesday),
8am-12am-ish EST (UTC-5).
cygwin.com web and git will be unavailable during this outage.
The Cygwin setup program should continue to function (as if it can't
The following packages have been uploaded to the Cygwin distribution as a test
release:
* duplicity-1.2.2-2
Duplicity backs directories by producing encrypted tar-format
volumes and uploading them to a remote or local file server. Because duplicity
uses librsync, the incremental archives are
The following packages have been uploaded to the Cygwin distribution as a test
release:
* duplicity-1.2.2-2
Duplicity backs directories by producing encrypted tar-format
volumes and uploading them to a remote or local file server. Because duplicity
uses librsync, the incremental archives are
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