Just in case ...what i have to do to test those results
...ps. should i send it here if i have a working c++ class for forking
-- it evolved from that python thought here, which evolved into
general interest to those pipes and interacting with other apps in my
case (which is, as i have
On Thu, Mar 16, 2006 at 11:57:06AM +0100, Simon Stelling wrote:
Pingveno wrote:
kde-base/* ~x86
or, to apply it to a single version, this:
=kde-base/*-3.5.1 ~x86
Regular expressions would, of course, work too. They might be a little
bit of overkill, though.
Bug 57153, was RESOLVED
Brian told that portage already has sqlite support.
Where i can find it or how i can turn it on? Is there any bugs or
other reasons to not use it? I would like to support it's code as this
is nr. 1 priority for me right now :)
--
tvali
(e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; msn: [EMAIL PROTECTED];
icq:
On Wednesday 15 March 2006 16:13, Gustavo Sverzut Barbieri wrote:
Hello,
There is any provision for binary dependency on Gentoo/Portage? The
way it works now is quite messy with things like revdep-rebuild.
I have an idea to solve this problem: after software is build, you
check which files
To make this things worse, the above example assumes that within a slot,
the libraries are binary compatible. There are examples of libraries that
are not. And what about a library whose interface is dependent on a third
library: B uses A, C uses B, but B exports A. So B is dependent on A, and
On Thu, Mar 16, 2006 at 02:58:00PM +0100, Paul de Vrieze wrote:
On Wednesday 15 March 2006 16:13, Gustavo Sverzut Barbieri wrote:
Hello,
There is any provision for binary dependency on Gentoo/Portage? The
way it works now is quite messy with things like revdep-rebuild.
Solving this is
On Thursday 16 March 2006 15:18, tvali wrote:
To make this things worse, the above example assumes that within a
slot, the libraries are binary compatible. There are examples of
libraries that are not. And what about a library whose interface is
dependent on a third library: B uses A, C
On Thursday 16 March 2006 15:24, Brian Harring wrote:
I would have called bincompat BINSLOT, but the idea is the same.
As per the norm, requires a smart resolver; for c++ would expect
cycles to occur where the only solution is to pull in libstdc++ (fex)
to sidestep horkage while doing the