X-Git-Url: http://git.marmaro.de/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=docs%2FREADME.developers;h=74c3c07503d49cc1addf6c48d867af08ba4cc982;hb=0d6e062b466d0ef7c84b56258612cd87044917f6;hp=9314563cfb943ee193cc1204883e484cf94d46c2;hpb=e0233d70fb7bfac996b3514ae60d7eedef0e6ad3;p=mmh diff --git a/docs/README.developers b/docs/README.developers index 9314563..74c3c07 100644 --- a/docs/README.developers +++ b/docs/README.developers @@ -41,12 +41,23 @@ end-users who don't have any interest in changing the configure-related files and don't have autoconf installed. They'll be unable to make without playing around with `touch'. -The correct order to commit the configure-related files is: +The correct procedure to commit the configure-related files is: -% cvs commit acconfig.h aclocal.m4 config.h.in configure.in configure stamp-h.in + % cvs commit acconfig.h aclocal.m4 configure.in + % autoheader; autoconf; date > stamp-h.in + % cvs commit config.h.in configure stamp-h.in -If you haven't changed all of those files, just commit the rest in the -stated order (e.g. cvs commit acconfig.h config.h.in stamp-h.in). +The reason for the three-step commit is that configure.in contains the RCS $Id +keyword, so when you commit it, a new version is written locally. Therefore, +the autoconf regeneration should be held off until after the commit, or your +local stamp-h.in will become out-of-sync with the CVS version (granted, not that +big a deal). For the second step, you're doing the same commands as a +`make reset' would do, but using that command would require extra configure runs +to make Makefile be up-to-date. + +If you haven't changed all the files noted above, just commit the ones you have +changed, in the stated order (for instance, configure.in, then configure and +stamp-h.in). ------------------- @@ -126,8 +137,11 @@ zotnet/mts/ MTS code not specific to any single MTS apparently goes here. zotnet/tws/ - No idea what "tws" stands for, other than 't' almost certainly standing for - "time". Date and time manipulation routines go here. + "tws" apparently stands for "time with structure", a rather odd phrase. + This directory used to be the place for date and time manipulation code, but + currently nothing in here is compiled. There are new, more portable + versions of the key files in h/ and sbr/, and this directory will soon go + away completely. -------------------------------------------------------