Hi,
Im writing a perl auto-downloader that is supposed to maintain the directory
structure. My problem is that with a link like http://www.cisco.com/abcd extracted
from a file i have no know no way of knowing whether what i am downloading
is a file or directory(because when you try to d/l a dir th
Jenny Eastman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Im writing a perl auto-downloader that is supposed to maintain the
> directory structure. My problem is that with a link like
> http://www.cisco.com/abcd extracted from a file i have no know no
> way of knowing whether what i am downloading is a file or
Greetings! I'm new to this mailing list, though not to wget. I've
successfully compiled wget on a variety of platforms in the past, but I
seem to be having a problem, and I'm hoping someone can help me.
I am attempting to build wget 1.8.2 on one of the new G5 PowerMac
machines (dual processor
After ploughing through the archives of this mailing list, looking for
additional clues why wget 1.8.2 wasn't linking correctly, I found that
wget 1.9 beta 5 was released recently. I downloaded the source code
for wget 1.9 beta 5 and am getting the same link problems I was getting
with 1.8.2:
Do you see the missing symbol when you do an "nm -D" command against either
libssl.so or libcrypto.so? (It shows up on my Linux system in
libcrypto.so.)
Mark Post
-Original Message-
From: Robert Poole [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, October 12, 2003 2:23 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
"Robert Poole" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> gcc -O2 -Wall -Wno-implicit -o wget cmpt.o connect.o convert.o
> cookies.o ftp.o ftp-basic.o ftp-ls.o ftp-opie.o getopt.o hash.o
> headers.o host.o html-parse.o html-url.o http.o init.o log.o main.o
> gen-md5.o netrc.o progress.o rbuf.o recur.o res.o re
First off, on OS X (which is a BSD-based system, so a lot of the
conventions don't match up with Linux), OpenSSL builds libcrypto.a and
libssl.a and stuffs them in /usr/local/lib (and also creates a
/usr/local/ssl/lib, which is empty -- go figure).
Secondly, nm doesn't take a -D command line op
I did a little digging. Even though I compiled openssl, and it
installed things under /usr/local, there are other libssl and libcrypto
versions on the system; so I'm kind of scratching my head, trying to
figure out how to force wget to build against the stuff that I actually
compiled, instead
On Tuesday 07 of October 2003 12:08, Hrvoje Niksic wrote:
> Thanks!
btw. looking into test4 I see that autoconf conception is used in weird way.
Normally aclocal.m4 is autogenerated by aclocal command (and it includes
sources of macros from /usr/share/autoconf/autoconf/*.m4 and from local
acinc
"Robert Poole" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I did a little digging. Even though I compiled openssl, and it
> installed things under /usr/local, there are other libssl and
> libcrypto versions on the system; so I'm kind of scratching my head,
> trying to figure out how to force wget to build agai
Arkadiusz Miskiewicz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Tuesday 07 of October 2003 12:08, Hrvoje Niksic wrote:
>> Thanks!
>
> btw. looking into test4 I see that autoconf conception is used in
> weird way. Normally aclocal.m4 is autogenerated by aclocal command
"Normally" only if you're also using A
Hrvoje and I have had an off-list dialogue about this subject. We've settled
on "HUR-voy-eh" as the closest phonetic rendition of his name for English
speakers. It helps to remember that the "r" is rolled.
Tony
I tried what you suggested, and of course did a "make clean" to make
sure everything got recompiled from scratch, but the link still bombs
with the same error message. I even copied the libssl.a and
libcrypto.a files to /usr/local/ssl/lib (which was empty up to this
point, very strange), and t
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