This is the mail archive of the
cygwin-developers
mailing list for the Cygwin project.
Re: native symlink
- From: Jeffrey Altman <jaltman at openafs dot org>
- To: cygwin-developers at cygwin dot com
- Date: Sat, 13 Apr 2013 09:08:01 -0400
- Subject: Re: native symlink
- References: <20130402000633 dot GA3977 at ednor dot casa dot cgf dot cx> <9362C76C-DB6B-4DA8-B61E-7980CFDF7A8A at mac dot com> <20130403014056 dot GA3383 at ednor dot casa dot cgf dot cx> <2EC5409B-C507-4B41-862C-D42D69CE3741 at mac dot com> <515BB10C dot 9080101 at openafs dot org> <20130403152907 dot GD2468 at calimero dot vinschen dot de> <515C5E4F dot 3050406 at openafs dot org> <20130403172929 dot GI2468 at calimero dot vinschen dot de> <20130403204641 dot GB25170 at calimero dot vinschen dot de> <51673152 dot 4010403 at openafs dot org> <20130412083310 dot GA5464 at calimero dot vinschen dot de>
- Reply-to: jaltman at openafs dot org
On 4/12/2013 4:33 AM, Corinna Vinschen wrote:
> On Apr 11 17:55, Jeffrey Altman wrote:
>> Corinna,
>>
>> Sorry for the delay in testing
>
> No worries.
>
>> but I can now confirm that this patch
>> corrects the behavior in which the wrong status information was being
>> used.
>
> Thanks for testing. I checked in a slightly reworked version of the
> patch. Can you give it another try, just to be sure?
Reading the code I believe the revised patch is fine.
However, I'm suddenly unable to build anything. gcc 4.5.3 produces:
$ gcc hello.c
gcc: Internal error: Segmentation fault (program cc1)
on even the most basic C programs. I haven't had time to dive into what
might be happening.