hmm, I thought I almost had it but when I check, here's what I get: [jzygmont]# rpm -q glibc-devel glibc-devel-2.1.3-15
[jzygmont]# find / -name errno.h find: /proc/6/fd: Permission denied /usr/include/bits/errno.h /usr/include/errno.h /usr/include/sys/errno.h /usr/lib/bcc/include/arch/errno.h /usr/lib/bcc/include/bsd/errno.h /usr/lib/bcc/include/errno.h /usr/lib/bcc/include/generic/errno.h /usr/lib/bcc/include/linux/errno.h /usr/lib/bcc/include/linuxmt/errno.h /usr/lib/bcc/include/msdos/errno.h /usr/lib/bcc/include/sys/errno.h [jzygmont]# exit any ideas? I really have to thank you for your help so far. On Sat, 12 Jan 2002, C. Bensend wrote: > > On Sat, 12 Jan 2002, Justin Zygmont wrote: > > > ok, here it is, I spent some time on this so far so any help would be > > appreciated. It still looks to me like make doesn't finish. Thanks for > > your help! > > Hey Justin, > > From your script output: > > > make[1]: Entering directory `/home/mailman/mailman-2.0.8/src' > gcc -c -I. -DPREFIX="\"/home/mailman\"" -DPYTHON="\"/usr/bin/python\"" > -DHELPFUL > -g -O2 -g -O2 -DHAVE_STRERROR=1 -DHAVE_SETREGID=1 -DHAVE_SYSLOG=1 > -DSTDC_HEADER > S=1 -DHAVE_SYSLOG_H=1 -DGETGROUPS_T=gid_t -DHAVE_VSNPRINTF=1 ./common.c > In file included from /usr/include/errno.h:36, > from common.h:27, > from ./common.c:20: > /usr/include/bits/errno.h:25: linux/errno.h: No such file or directory > make[1]: *** [common.o] Error 1 > > > You'll notice that this error came when it entered the directory > 'src', where the mail-wrapper.c file lives. Hence, it didn't > build _anything_ in that directory. Hence, no wrapper. :( > > Now, to fix it... On one of my linux boxen, I did a 'locate > errno.h'. It appears in '/usr/include/errno.h', and from the > output of 'rpm -qf /usr/include/errno.h': > > hostname (user)% rpm -qf /usr/include/errno.h > glibc-devel-2.1.3-15 > > You need to install the glibc-devel package, and I bet it > will work perfectly. :) You _are_ running on linux, if > I remember correctly? > > HTH! > > Benny > > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > A 'good' landing is one from which you can walk away. A 'great' > landing is one after which they can use the plane again. > --Rules of the Air, #8 > > > ------------------------------------------------------ Mailman-Users maillist - [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/mailman-users