direction of where this bit is set (variable name in some
structure, etc).
Thanks.
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Justin Hopper [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Sorry, this of course should have read 'after 665 and before 667'.
On Fri, 2003-02-21 at 11:13, Justin Hopper wrote:
Hello unamed person,
For the rest of the world that doesn't follow Christian Mythology, 666
is just the number after 667 and before 665. I've used 666 in several
coding
=)
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Justin Hopper
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
UNIX Systems Engineer
http://www.spry.com
On Fri, 2003-02-21 at 13:15, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Obviously I don't think it is mythology or I wouldn't believe it :-)
Actually it is not my place to tell people what numbers they are and are not
allowed
(hints) file?
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Justin Hopper
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
UNIX Systems Engineer
http://www.spry.com
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In the last episode (Jan 03), Justin Hopper said:
Hmmm, I guess I just assumed that since ldconfig had cached the
absolute path to the library, ld would not need to know the library
staring at this for too long.
Any help would be appreciated.
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Justin Hopper
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
UNIX Systems Engineer
http://www.spry.com
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that directory any
other way.
Thanks for your help. As a point of curiosity, I'd still like to know
why ld would still need the -L /usr/local/lib if the full path to the
library is already in the cache?
--
Justin Hopper
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
UNIX Systems Engineer
http://www.spry.com
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