What is the minimum needed to run gtar?
David Rothenberger
daveroth@acm.org
Wed Aug 6 19:29:00 GMT 2003
"Biederman, Steve" wrote:
>
> I want to allow the users I support to be able to run Cygwin tar on their Windows machines.
> These machines have not had any Cygwin installed; they're just bare Windows machines.
>
> I provided them tar.exe and cygwin1.dll and assumed that with these, they could run
> Cygwin tar sucessfully. It appears that that isn't the case: machines without Cygwin
> installed see different behavior than machines which have it installed. (Running tar
> on machines without Cygwin installed creates incorrect tar archives.)
You can find out what DLLs an executable needs by running cygcheck on
it. On my machine, I get
$ cygcheck tar
Found: .\tar.exe
tar.exe
C:\WINNT\system32\KERNEL32.dll
C:\WINNT\system32\NTDLL.DLL
.\cygwin1.dll
.\cygiconv-2.dll
.\cygintl-2.dll
> What is the minimum I need to provide to a non-Cygwin Windows machine to get
> Cygwin tar to run reliably?
I was able to reproduce your problems with tar when I removed Cygwin
from my machine (which is why the paths are weird in the cygcheck output
above).
Through experimentation, I discovered that the problem went away if I
created an /etc mount. From a Windows CLI prompt:
mkdir c:\temp\etc
mount c:/temp/etc /etc
After I run those commands, I can make the tar file without problems.
Note that there is nothing in the /etc directory. But, it does have to
exist. If you skip the "mkdir" command above, it will fail as before.
Dave
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