terminfo and /usr/share/terminfo requirement
cyg Simple
cygsimple@gmail.com
Tue Nov 4 14:42:00 GMT 2014
On Tue, Nov 4, 2014 at 4:29 AM, Corinna Vinschen wrote:
> On Nov 3 17:34, cyg Simple wrote:
>> On Mon, Nov 3, 2014 at 5:23 PM, Yaakov Selkowitz wrote:
>> > On 2014-11-03 16:14, cyg Simple wrote:
>> >>
>> >> It is true that I am not using setup-${arch}.exe but that shouldn't
>> >> matter as long as I have the dependencies resolved.
>> >
>> >
>> > Yes, it does matter; Cygwin setup is the only supported method of creating
>> > and managing a Cygwin installation. Please try again from scratch with
>> > Cygwin setup and you will see that there is absolutely no need for a
>> > /usr/share => /share mount.
>>
>> Are you saying setup or some post install file doesn't mount
>> /usr/share?
>
> It's not necessary. Setup-${arch}.exe creates the default directory
> layout.
>
>> If a mounted /usr/share isn't important then why is
>> /usr/bin and /usr/lib automounted?
>
> Two reasons:
>
> - Windows.
>
> DLLs are found in the directory of the application even if $PATH
> doesn't point to the directory containing the DLL. cygwin1.dll and
> all other cygwin DLLs are in the same path as the essential binaries
> so that you can start them from Windows even if $PATH is not set to
> contain Cygwin's /bin. If we had separate /bin and /usr/bin dirs, we
> would have the essential binaries spread over two directories, but the
> cygwin DLLs in only one of them, or worse, spread over two dirs as
> well. Hilarity ensues.
>
> - GCC.
>
> GCC generates the path to certain files under the lib dir relative to
> the path it has been started from. So, if you run /bin/gcc, it searches
> for the files under /lib, if you start /usr/bin/gcc it searches under
> /usr/lib. Since you can do both, you have to handle lib just as bin.
>
> There was never a need to do that for any other directory, that's why
> we don't have /sbin <=> /usr/sbin as Fedora.
But /usr/share is used by the terminfo library to find the files that
define TERM=cygwin or whatever value it has. Without the mount of
/usr/share then the terminal doesn't know how to handle things like
the Backspace key when deleting characters.
If /usr is mounted to the PREFIX/usr directory and PREFIX/usr/lib does
not exist the issue becomes one of a confusing file or directory not
found message. My suggestion would be to automount /usr pointing to
PREFIX/usr instead of adding another specific directory of /usr/share;
one never knows when some other reason exists to have another one. If
that isn't acceptable at least add the /usr/share automount, please.
It would eliminate the plethora of email and forum posts asking why
the Backspace key doesn't work.
--
cyg Simple
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