Date: Mon, 25 May 1998 16:54:07 +1000 From: "John Saunders" <john.saunders@scitec.com.au> To: "Mike Smith" <mike@smith.net.au> Cc: <freebsd-stable@FreeBSD.ORG>, "Dan Swartzendruber" <dswartz@druber.com> Subject: Re: make buildworld/installworld question Message-ID: <038c01bd87a9$ee6dadb0$6cb611cb@saruman.scitec.com.au>
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>> I've done 'make world' in both single user mode and multi user >> .. One thing to watch is that the /usr/libexec/ld.so file gets >> updated. The last time I did 'make world' in multi user mode it >> didn't. I tend to 'ls -lt' in the standard directories to check >> on what didn't get updated. > >ld.so is installed using '-C', so if the new version is the same as the >old one, it's not changed. It's debatable as to whether the use of -C >is justifiable (it's not a performance improvement, and it makes the >use of timestamps for identifying stale files unworkable). The timestamp first caused me to notice the file. Upon closer inspection the size between old and new was different, 69K vs 70K if memory serves (I did check stripped sizes). So if install really does work around the file being in use then something else must have failed. I must admit it has only happened once as I do check the timestamps after every 'make world'. Do the include files get installed with -C as well? Until I did a 'make -DCLOBBER includes' I had timestamps from Oct 22 (which appears to be the 2.2.5-RELEASE build date) for most of my include files. >The 'installworld' target is almost always successful without any help. I like the words "almost always", I use them a lot myself :) Cheers. -- . +-------------------------------------------------------+ ,--_|\ | John Saunders mailto:John.Saunders@scitec.com.au | / Oz \ | SCITEC LIMITED Phone +61294289563 Fax +61294289933 | \_,--\_/ | "By the time you make ends meet, they move the ends." | v +-------------------------------------------------------+ To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-stable" in the body of the message
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