Newbie Cygdrive questions

Mike Rushton mrushton@ptd.net
Fri Feb 7 03:52:00 GMT 2014


Good ... I will have to work with that Cygpath and see what kind of 
results that I get.
I am unsure how this program is going to respond.

I may have to just do the shell escape and execute the invocation of 
gentran if the program can not figure out where the location of its 
configuration files should be.


Now I see that Cygwin has a C compiler ... I will have to play with this 
a little later - I may be able to find a use for this.

What about a Secure Shell client to transfer files and to get a secure 
session going, does Cygwin have that ?  I see other people's emails 
about ssh but am not
sure if this is what I am looking for.

This Cygwin is a great package to work with.

I have been programming in some sort of shell script since 1992.





On 2/6/2014 10:09 PM, Larry Hall (Cygwin) wrote:
> On 2/6/2014 8:05 PM, Mike Rushton wrote:
>> I see.
>>
>>
>> What would you say to this ?
>>
>> I have to use an EDI translator - it runs under windows/dos and had unix
>> versions
>>
>> I was trying this ... but the program needed to see the path of a config
>> file ... after the -cp switch.
>>
>> /cygdrive/c/gentran61SA/lftran /cygdrive/c/gentran61sa/data/EDN -id -cp
>> /cygdrive/c/Gentran61SA
>>
>>
>> It gave me errors can not open file 
>> /cygdrive/c/Gentran61SA\ediprim.cfg.  It
>> was like the program could not figure out
>> what style of paths to use.
>>
>> I changed it to :  (escape out of bash and run this code)
>>
>> ! c:/gentran61SA/lftran c:/gentran61sa/data/EDN -id -cp c:/Gentran61SA
>>
>> and it worked perfectly.    Is there a better way to do this ?
>
> Well, as I said before, Cygwin really prefers POSIX paths.  But, as 
> you've
> found out, non-Cygwin programs won't understand POSIX paths.  If you need
> to interact with non-Cygwin programs, you'll either want to translate the
> paths you send to them back to DOS-style paths with cygpath, set up links
> that both Windows and Cygwin will understand without translation, or live
> somewhat dangerously and use the path-style you found above.  I'm sure
> there are other flavors you could find that could also work, at least in
> some cases.  The cygpath route is the one approach that fully supports
> POSIX paths and DOS-style paths.
>


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