--- degs degs@giantblob.com wrote:
On Friday 10 May 2002 21:03, Andriy Palamarchuk wrote:
Hi Degs,
--- degs degs@giantblob.com wrote:
Hi,
I find tools/wineinstall frequently fails in ./configure when trying to rebuild Wine after a "cvs update". I only seem
to be
able to fix this by blowing away the whole tree and re-fetching it
with
"cvs checkout". Is wineinstall the Right Way to build Wine when one
is
trying to hack on it?
Wineinstall not only installs wine, but also configures it. Usually you do not need to
reconfigure
wine each time you refreshed source from CVS, so simply run in the Wine root dorectory: ./configure make depend make install
or in one line: ./configure && make depend && make install
"make install" will refresh the Wine binaries, but won't do anything with your existing
configuration.
BTW, question about installation belongs to wine-users, look forward for your questions about hacking ;-)
Hi,
Sorry I wasn't very clear - its not really a wine-users question per se - I want to be able to hack on Wine whilst keeping up-to-date with the cvs.winehq.com version and need to know how to build it. I'm aware wineinstall runs configure - its configure that fails for me. It fails regardless of whether I run configure manually or through wineinstall so wineinstall is probably a red herring.
So, my question is: what is the correct way to rebuild Wine after 'cvs update' so that the configure *doesn't* fail? preferably without having to blow away the whole tree, re-check out and re-merge any changes which I've made to it?
I'm sure this must be a common problem but I can't figure out how to get around it - if anyone can tell me the right way to do this it would be really handly.
BTW I know its not my changes to my local Wine tree which break configure as I've changed nothing in that area (I've only added debug code to some bits of GDI which are giving me jip)
thanks -- degs
are you downloading on windows and then copying over to linux? if so, you will probably need a tool like uxcook95, which fixes problems with files downloaded in ascii (windows' preferred method of storage, even for binary files), google search will probably bring up a few hits...
-Dustin
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