On Thu, Jan 07, 2016 at 03:04:53PM +0000, William Park wrote: > Something I (re)discovered recently... > > Windows is unavoidable at work. So, you're working on Windows machine, but > you need your favourite Unix tools and utilities to process some file. What > do you do? So far, I found 3 solutions: > > 1. VirtualBox -- virtualbox.org > > Keep VirtualBox running minimized, with shared folder enabled. Then, bring > it up whenever you need it. This is what I usually do, because VirtualBox is > needed for other things. But, this only works on your desktop. If you have > to move around to many machines, then this may not be ideal, because even > though you can put VMs on USB stick, you need to install VirtualBox on those > machines. > > 2. BusyBox (for Windows) -- frippery.org/busybox/ > > It's single binary, and it's ideal for USB stick. You get all the programs > that BusyBox comes with. But, sometimes, you need a full set of options that > you're familiar with. > > > 3. Cygwin -- cygwin.com > > > It's single directory which you can put on USB stick. That directory becomes > your root filesystem, but you can access other drives through /cygdrive which > acts like /mnt. This is my recent (re)discovery. I knew about it, but > totally forgot.
I thought a number of gnu tools were available compiled with mingw. That could be an option too. Unlike busybox they are the real full tools, and unlike cygwin and virtualbox, you can actually use them in your normal environment. http://www.mingw.org/ -- Len sorensen --- Talk Mailing List [email protected] http://gtalug.org/mailman/listinfo/talk
