Content-Type: text/plain Content-Disposition: inline Content-Transfer-Encoding: binary MIME-Version: 1.0 X-Mailer: MIME-tools 5.411 (Entity 5.404) X-RT-Original-Encoding: iso-8859-1 Content-Length: 2080 From marc@MIT.EDU Mon Nov 25 15:39:40 1996 Received: from MIT.EDU (SOUTH-STATION-ANNEX.MIT.EDU [18.72.1.2]) by rt-11.MIT.EDU (8.7.5/8.7.3) with SMTP id PAA08673 for ; Mon, 25 Nov 1996 15:39:40 -0500 Received: from DUN-DUN-NOODLES.MIT.EDU by MIT.EDU with SMTP id AA25467; Mon, 25 Nov 96 15:39:39 EST Received: by DUN-DUN-NOODLES.MIT.EDU (5.x/4.7) id AA17887; Mon, 25 Nov 1996 15:39:36 -0500 Message-Id: <9611252039.AA17887@DUN-DUN-NOODLES.MIT.EDU> Date: Mon, 25 Nov 1996 15:39:36 -0500 From: marc@MIT.EDU Reply-To: marc@MIT.EDU To: krb5-bugs@MIT.EDU Subject: krb5 install blows out on windows X-Send-Pr-Version: 3.99 >Number: 236 >Category: krb5-build >Synopsis: krb5 install blows out on netbsd >Confidential: no >Severity: serious >Priority: high >Responsible: tlyu >State: closed >Class: sw-bug >Submitter-Id: unknown >Arrival-Date: Mon Nov 25 15:40:00 EST 1996 >Last-Modified: Mon Nov 25 17:46:28 EST 1996 >Originator: Marc Horowitz N1NZU >Organization: mit >Release: 1.0-development >Environment: System: SunOS DUN-DUN-NOODLES 5.4 Generic_101945-37 sun4m sparc >Description: >How-To-Repeat: >Fix: We can just decide to state that bsd make is broken (which it is), and that bsd people should use gmake (which works fine), or we can just remove the install rule from the db in the krb5 tree, since it doesn't get used, anyway. Tom prefers the latter. >Audit-Trail: State-Changed-From-To: open-closed State-Changed-By: hartmans State-Changed-When: Mon Nov 25 17:46:10 1996 State-Changed-Why: At TOm's request I have removed the install target; will update readme. >Unformatted: >> * make install blows out for NetBSD >> >> This is mentioned in the README file, with a pointer to >> the build notes, but there doesn't seem to be anything >> in build.texinfo, nor was a PR opened on this. Que pasa? NetBSD make, for reasons which are lame, will use an "obj" subdirectory if one is present, instead of using the current directory. This causes Bad Things to happen.