Adrian Aichner wrote:
>>>>>"David" == David A Cobb
<superbiskit(a)home.com> writes:
>>>>>
>> Report the cvs update (or checkout) command line you used and the
>> time
>> and time zone you ran it. That determines what you'll get.
>> version.sh can't possible have that information.
David,
version.sh and all other files you update via CVS depend on WHEN and
HOW YOU choose to update. You may apply patches or manual changes on
top of that.
What I am trying to point out: Only you can know what exactly you are
building from. Know your sources :-)
I think we're talking /past/ each other!
I know *my* source changes and, if I were filing a bug report, I would
certainly mention them. What I do *NOT* know is what bugfixes *y'all*
have applied to "r21-5-latest-beta".
I don't expect something you put in version.sh to identify anyting I do
after I cvs update. But, when I report that I cannot sucessfully build
from the source tree, I should be telling you precisely *what I
downloaded* plus anything I might have changed (I ain't there yet!). It
would be so much more meaningful if the date/time I report were the
date/time at which Stephen applied the latest bugfix - who cares when I
got around to trying a build?
If you use straight-forward ways to update from CVS, like
cvs update -r r21-5-3
then the thing to report is just that.
No, as shown in a previous posting in this thread, saying I have a
particular tag-version doesn't tell you what bugfixes I have downloaded.
I don't see a simple solution to this general problem.
I think I suggested a very simple solution if we are both talking about
the same problem.
MfG,
--
David A. Cobb, Software Engineer, Public Access Advocate, All around
nice guy.
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