Dear Fossil Experts,
first of all I would like to thank you for providing this great
software! I was really amazed when I found it. I searched for a simple
bug tracking/ticketing solution for a small software project and before
I found fossil I played around with some of the bigger bug tracking
You know, sometimes all it takes is a reminder that I'm trying to be too
smart for my own good. Using Windows PowerShell, and a downloaded version of
Fossil built for Windows (gee, isn't that obvious?!), I could open the
repository without a problem. Woo hoo!
Having that working, I experimented
Thanks for your answer. To be more specific: It is no problem to write
the download page manually. I don't expect fossil to do this for me. But
when I have the download.html file plus the packages/installers/source
archives or whatever things I would like to provide to the users: Where
should I
Personally, I'd use the wiki for that. If you want to autogenerate a
download wiki page, you can do that, too, and then have your script update
the Download wiki page.
Bill
On Thu, Apr 21, 2011 at 4:14 PM, Felix Wolfheimer
f.wolfhei...@googlemail.com wrote:
Thanks for your answer. To be
On Thu, Apr 21, 2011 at 5:14 PM, Felix Wolfheimer
f.wolfhei...@googlemail.com wrote:
Thanks for your answer. To be more specific: It is no problem to write
the download page manually. I don't expect fossil to do this for me. But
when I have the download.html file plus the
On Fri, Apr 22, 2011 at 3:47 AM, Richard Hipp d...@sqlite.org wrote:
It never occurred to me to make the built-in server of Fossil have the
ability of serve separate files. I figured that anybody who wanted to do
that would use a real web server like Apache or Nginx or even something
like
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