On 14 September 2005 11:51, Peter Simons wrote:
> I understand the GHC CVS repository has moved recently? It
> appears that the document
>
> http://www.haskell.org/ghc/docs/latest/html/building/sec-cvs.html
>
> hasn't been updated accordingly; could someone with CVS
>
Hi,
I understand the GHC CVS repository has moved recently? It
appears that the document
http://www.haskell.org/ghc/docs/latest/html/building/sec-cvs.html
hasn't been updated accordingly; could someone with CVS
commit access please fix that?
Thanks,
The GHC CVS repository (plus all the other projects on cvs.haskell.org)
can now be accessed via a CVSWeb interface; point your browsers at:
http://cvs.haskell.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb.cgi/fptools/
--
http://sc3d.org/rrt/ | impatience, n. the urge to do nothing
configure
> script and Parser.hs/ParseIface.hs in the CVS repository.
Sorry, but I strongly object this! There should *never* be any files in the
repo that can be generated by some tools. Imagine, what would happen to
diffs: not easy to read, size blow-up, bogus conflicts, etc. ...
If these gen
ository is very puritanical about having to have autoconf and
happy installed. Since the chances of my wanting to muck about with the
configuration file/GHC parsers are nill, why not include the configure
script and Parser.hs/ParseIface.hs in the CVS repository. Also modify
the
CVS changes
===
GHC's CVS Repository is moving to a new location at OGI today. The new cvs
server will be cvs.haskell.org (the DNS info may take a few days to filter
through).
Jeff Lewis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> and Andy Gill <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> at OGI will
be supporti
Dear GHC Hackers,
To allow easier access to our latest sources, and to allow people to
more easily hack on GHC or other Glasgow FP Tools, we've decided to
allow read-only access to our CVS repository for anyone that wants
it.
If you already know how to use CVS, all you need to