Sounds reasonable. If we really want to be serious about it we should update
hudson (or add buildbot) to build/test on cygwin/windows in addition to our
current ubuntu build. But we can do it by hand to start with.
Patrick
On Tue, Aug 31, 2010 at 11:06 AM, Ben Collins
wrote:
> I agree that avoid
I agree that avoiding the multiple build systems would be nice.
Unfortunately, though, windows is an animal unto itself. I would
be hesitant to change the whole build system over to cmake just for the
ideal situation that there be one build system for all platforms. I have
seen projects that mai
Hi Ben, that's great!. There has been some interest in this, however I'm not
aware that anyone has done a port.
Here's how to contrib:
http://wiki.apache.org/hadoop/ZooKeeper/HowToContribute
basically you would create a JIRA and attach your patch against latest trunk
svn. The committers will revie
Hi Ben, that's great!. There has been some interest in this, however I'm not
aware that anyone has done a port.
Here's how to contrib:
http://wiki.apache.org/hadoop/ZooKeeper/HowToContribute
basically you would create a JIRA and attach your patch against latest trunk
svn. The committers will revie
@hadoop.apache.org
Subject: windows port of C API
I have a working win32 port of the C API, not depending on Cygwin, that
supports the "single-threaded" model of network interaction. It compiles in
Visual Studio 2010 and works on 64 bit Windows 7. There are know issues,
and it is in it's init
Ben Collins writes:
>
> I have a working win32 port of the C API, not depending on Cygwin, that
> supports the "single-threaded" model of network interaction. It compiles in
> Visual Studio 2010 and works on 64 bit Windows 7. There are know issues,
> and it is in it's initial stages; but it
I have a working win32 port of the C API, not depending on Cygwin, that
supports the "single-threaded" model of network interaction. It compiles in
Visual Studio 2010 and works on 64 bit Windows 7. There are know issues,
and it is in it's initial stages; but it has been successfully used against