■+└&ëG&ëë╛n Ä┌9&9ptHÄ▄9&9vt=╕PPÄ▐9& 6û& 6öÜ`┘â─╕æ%PÄ▐9& 6û& 6öÜZ┘â─ÜT┘δ╕╡%PÜ|α â─╗TÄ:ë₧■îå■&╟╕╨PÜ╒ â─ëF∞ëVε╕pPÜ╒ â─ëF≡ëV≥+└ëF÷ëF⌠èå{ ■å{ <vΘvâ~uZ 6`# 6^#╕└%P ╢~ VÜααâ─╕P ╢~ VÜ"αâ─P ╢~ VÜJ] e newspak distribution referred to in the 'other sources of
information' section above. In that case, you can probably go right
to typing 'make'.
To extract a gzip'd tar archive, I do the following:
gunzip -c filename.tar.z | tar xvf -
3.1 Edit Makefile.in to set installation directories.
Here, I set 'prefix' to "/usr" rather than the default
of "/usr/local"
3.2 Run 'configure'
Type ``sh configure''.
The configure script will compile a number of test programs to see
what is available on your system and will calculate many things.
The configure script will create conf.h from conf.h.in and
Makefile from Makefile.in. It will also create config.status,
which is a shell script which actually creates the files.
3.2 Configure the future setup of the software
Examine conf.h and Makefile to make sure they're right.
- I took the defaults
Edit policy.h for your local system.
- set the type of lockfiles you want (HAVE_HDB_LOCKFILES)
5.0 Acknowledgements
The following people have helped in the assembly of the information
(and experience) that helped make this document possible:
Ed Carp, Steve Robbins, Ian Taylor, Greg Naber, Matt Welsh,