Whoops.  Missed a list.

Derek

--
Derek Price                      CVS Solutions Architect ( http://CVSHome.org )
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]     OpenAvenue ( http://OpenAvenue.com )
--
He who laughs last thinks slowest.




Harlan Stenn wrote:

>  /bin/sh: <BA>: not found
>  WARNING: `:' is needed, and you do not seem to have it handy on your
>          system.  You might have modified some files without having the
>          proper tools for further handling them.  Check the `README' file,
>          it often tells you about the needed prerequirements for installing
>          this package.  You may also peek at any GNU archive site, in case
>          some other package would contain this missing `:' program.
>  configure: WARNING: `missing' script is too old or missing

Hmmm.... That warning looks to me like it came from the 'missing' script, but I
haven't been here long.  The content of the warning looks like your Ultrix
system can't handle the ':' command.  I didn't realize ':' was passed through
'missing' but maybe configure does something similar.  I didn't think 'missing'
would run until build time.

Anyway, the Bourne shells (/bin/sh programs) I know of treat ':' like a noop.
It's used to confuse some systems that don't like 'if's without 'else's (if
there is no 'else', put one in with a command to do nothing (put in a ':'
(noop))).  Of course, I remember that was Ultrix they were placating, but
I can't find the comments I remember with a cursory code review, so I'm
confused.

Maybe someone ran 'missing' from 'configure' with a ':' (noop) as a command to
see if 'missing' present and working?  'missing' might expect its program to be
in your path, so if it's a shell builtin it might fail?  Just guessing.

Derek

--
Derek Price                      CVS Solutions Architect ( http://CVSHome.org )
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]     OpenAvenue ( http://OpenAvenue.com )
--
And what if you track down these men and kill them?  What if you murdered all
of us?  From every corner of Europe hundreds, thousands, would rise to take our
places.

                - Paul Henreid as Victor Laszlo, _Casablanca_





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