2004-01-11 Joshua Daniel Franklin <joshuadfranklin@yahoo.com>

* Makefile.in: Add new target for single-file User's Guide, use new
        cygwin.dsl for output.
        * cygwin.dsl: New file, DSSSL stylesheet for custom Cygwin output.
        * cygwin-api.in.sgml: Update to DocBook SGML 4.2 DTD.
        * cygwin-ug-net.in.sgml: Update to DocBook SGML 4.2 DTD.
        * cygwin-ug.in.sgml: Update to DocBook SGML 4.2 DTD.
        * cygwinenv.sgml: Correct some tags. Add description of default values
        to ntsec, export, and error_start items.
        * dll.sgml: Add explanation of cyg prefix for DLLs.
        * effectively.sgml: Use systemitem tag for names of Cygwin packages.
        * how-programming.texinfo: Add example to FAQ entry.
        * pathnames.sgml: Add discussion of /proc filesystem.
	* setup-net.sgml: Correct some typos and grammar.
This commit is contained in:
Joshua Daniel Franklin 2004-01-11 08:32:09 +00:00
parent 83498941ba
commit ac51da4818
12 changed files with 297 additions and 63 deletions

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@ -1,3 +1,19 @@
2004-01-11 Joshua Daniel Franklin <joshuadfranklin@yahoo.com>
* Makefile.in: Add new target for single-file User's Guide, use new
cygwin.dsl for output.
* cygwin.dsl: New file, DSSSL stylesheet for custom Cygwin output.
* cygwin-api.in.sgml: Update to DocBook SGML 4.2 DTD.
* cygwin-ug-net.in.sgml: Update to DocBook SGML 4.2 DTD.
* cygwin-ug.in.sgml: Update to DocBook SGML 4.2 DTD.
* cygwinenv.sgml: Correct some tags. Add description of default values
to ntsec, export, and error_start items.
* dll.sgml: Add explanation of cyg prefix for DLLs.
* effectively.sgml: Use systemitem tag for names of Cygwin packages.
* how-programming.texinfo: Add example to FAQ entry.
* pathnames.sgml: Add discussion of /proc filesystem.
* setup-net.sgml: Correct some typos and grammar.
2003-09-01 Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
* pathnames.sgml: Remove description how to mount raw devices and

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@ -29,45 +29,51 @@ TEXI2HTML:=texi2html
include $(srcdir)/../Makefile.common
TOCLEAN:=faq.txt ./*.html readme.txt doctool.o doctool \
cygwin-ug.sgml cygwin-ug-net.sgml
TOCLEAN:=faq.txt ./*.html readme.txt doctool.o doctool.exe *.junk \
cygwin-ug.sgml cygwin-ug \
cygwin-ug-net.sgml cygwin-ug-net cygwin-ug-net.html \
cygwin-api.sgml cygwin-api cygwin-api-int.sgml cygwin-api-int
.SUFFIXES:
# You can add cygwin-api/cygwin-api.html if you want to.
all : \
cygwin-ug/cygwin-ug.html \
cygwin-ug-net/cygwin-ug-net.html \
cygwin-ug-net.html \
cygwin-api-int/cygwin-api-int.html \
cygwin-api/cygwin-api.html \
$(DOC) \
$(HTMLDOC)
clean:
rm -f $(TOCLEAN)
rm -Rf $(TOCLEAN)
install: all
# jw -d $(srcdir)/cygwin.dsl#html cygwin-ug-net.sgml
cygwin-ug/cygwin-ug.html : cygwin-ug.sgml doctool
-db2html $<
-db2html -d $(srcdir)/cygwin.dsl#html $<
cygwin-ug.sgml : cygwin-ug.in.sgml ./doctool Makefile
-./doctool -m $(SGMLDIRS) -s $(srcdir) -o $@ $<
cygwin-ug-net.html : cygwin-ug-net.sgml doctool
-jw -d $(srcdir)/cygwin.dsl#html -u $<
cygwin-ug-net/cygwin-ug-net.html : cygwin-ug-net.sgml doctool
-db2html $<
-db2html -d $(srcdir)/cygwin.dsl#html $<
cygwin-ug-net.sgml : cygwin-ug-net.in.sgml ./doctool Makefile
-./doctool -m $(SGMLDIRS) -s $(srcdir) -o $@ $<
cygwin-api/cygwin-api.html : cygwin-api.sgml
-db2html $<
-db2html -d $(srcdir)/cygwin.dsl#html $<
cygwin-api.sgml : cygwin-api.in.sgml ./doctool Makefile
-./doctool -m $(SGMLDIRS) -s $(srcdir) -o $@ $<
cygwin-api-int/cygwin-api-int.html : cygwin-api-int.sgml
-db2html $<
-db2html -d $(srcdir)/cygwin.dsl#html $<
cygwin-api-int.sgml : cygwin-api.in.sgml ./doctool Makefile
-./doctool -i -m $(SGMLDIRS) -s $(srcdir) -b cygwin-api-int -o $@ $<

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@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
<!doctype book PUBLIC "-//Davenport//DTD DocBook V3.0//EN" [
<!doctype book PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook V4.2//EN" [
<!ENTITY cygnus-copyright "<YEAR>1998</YEAR><HOLDER>Red Hat, Inc.</HOLDER>">
<!ENTITY cygnus-code-copyright "
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%

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@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
<!doctype book PUBLIC "-//Davenport//DTD DocBook V3.0//EN" [
<!doctype book PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook V4.2//EN" [
<!ENTITY cygnus-copyright
"<YEAR>1999,2000,2001</YEAR>
<HOLDER>Red Hat, Inc.</HOLDER>">

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@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
<!doctype book PUBLIC "-//Davenport//DTD DocBook V3.0//EN" [
<!doctype book PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook V4.2//EN" [
<!ENTITY cygnus-copyright "<YEAR>1999,2000,2001</YEAR>
<HOLDER>Red Hat, Inc.</HOLDER>">
<!ENTITY cygnus-code-copyright "

149
winsup/doc/cygwin.dsl Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,149 @@
<!DOCTYPE style-sheet PUBLIC
"-//James Clark//DTD DSSSL Style Sheet//EN" [
<!ENTITY % html "IGNORE">
<![%html;[
<!ENTITY % print "IGNORE">
<!ENTITY docbook.dsl PUBLIC
"-//Norman Walsh//DOCUMENT DocBook HTML Stylesheet//EN"
CDATA dsssl>
]]>
<!ENTITY % print "INCLUDE">
<![%print;[
<!ENTITY docbook.dsl PUBLIC
"-//Norman Walsh//DOCUMENT DocBook Print Stylesheet//EN"
CDATA dsssl>
]]>
]>
<style-sheet>
<!-- PRINT -->
<style-specification id="print" use="docbook">
<style-specification-body>
;; The following are
;; <!-- Cygnus customizations by Mark Galassi -->
;; ====================
;; customize the print stylesheet
;; ====================
;; make funcsynopsis look pretty
(define %funcsynopsis-decoration%
;; Decorate elements of a FuncSynopsis?
#t)
;; use graphics in admonitions, and have their path be "."
;; NO: we are not yet ready to use gifs in TeX and so forth
(define %admon-graphics-path%
"./")
(define %admon-graphics%
#f)
;; this is necessary because right now jadetex does not understand
;; symbolic entities, whereas things work well with numeric entities.
(declare-characteristic preserve-sdata?
"UNREGISTERED::James Clark//Characteristic::preserve-sdata?"
#f)
(define %two-side% #t)
(define %section-autolabel%
;; Are sections enumerated?
#t)
;; (define %title-font-family%
;; ;; The font family used in titles
;; "Ariel")
(define %visual-acuity%
;; General measure of document text size
;; "presbyopic"
;; "large-type"
"presbyopic")
(define %generate-part-toc% #t)
;;; The following customizations are from Tim Waugh's selfdocbook
;;; http://cyberelk.net/tim/docbook/
;;;
;;; TeX backend can go to PS (where EPS is needed)
;;; or to PDF (where PNG is needed). So, just
;;; omit the file extension altogether and let
;;; tex/pdfjadetex sort it out on its own.
(define (graphic-file filename)
(let ((ext (file-extension filename)))
(if (or (equal? 'backend 'tex) ;; Leave off the extension for TeX
(not filename)
(not %graphic-default-extension%)
(member ext %graphic-extensions%))
filename
(string-append filename "." %graphic-default-extension%))))
;;; Full justification.
(define %default-quadding%
'justify)
;;; To make URLs line wrap we use the TeX 'url' package.
;;; See also: jadetex.cfg
;; First we need to declare the 'formatting-instruction' flow class.
(declare-flow-object-class formatting-instruction
"UNREGISTERED::James Clark//Flow Object Class::formatting-instruction")
;; Then redefine ulink to use it.
(element ulink
(make sequence
(if (node-list-empty? (children (current-node)))
; ulink url="...", /ulink
(make formatting-instruction
data: (string-append "\\url{"
(attribute-string (normalize "url"))
"}"))
(if (equal? (attribute-string (normalize "url"))
(data-of (current-node)))
; ulink url="http://...", http://..., /ulink
(make formatting-instruction data:
(string-append "\\url{"
(attribute-string (normalize "url"))
"}"))
; ulink url="http://...", some text, /ulink
(make sequence
($charseq$)
(literal " (")
(make formatting-instruction data:
(string-append "\\url{"
(attribute-string (normalize "url"))
"}"))
(literal ")"))))))
;;; And redefine filename to use it too.
(element filename
(make formatting-instruction
data: (string-append "\\path{" (data-of (current-node)) "}")))
</style-specification-body>
</style-specification>
<!-- HTML -->
<style-specification id="html" use="docbook">
<style-specification-body>
;; If true (non-zero), elements of the FuncSynopsis will be decorated
;; (e.g. bold or italic).
(define %funcsynopsis-decoration% #t)
;; If true, a Table of Contents will be generated for each 'Article'.
(define %generate-article-toc% #t)
;; If true, a Table of Contents will be generated for each Part.
(define %generate-part-toc% #t)
;; The name of the stylesheet to place in the HTML LINK TAG,
;; or #f to suppress the stylesheet LINK.
(define %stylesheet% "docbook.css")
(define %use-id-as-filename% #t)
(define %html-ext% ".html")
</style-specification-body>
</style-specification>
<external-specification id="docbook" document="docbook.dsl">
</style-sheet>

View File

@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ by prefixing with <literal>no </literal>.</para>
<itemizedlist Mark="bullet">
<listitem>
<para><FirstTerm>(no)binmode</FirstTerm> - if set, non-disk
<para><envar>(no)binmode</envar> - if set, non-disk
(e.g. pipe and COM ports) file opens default to binary mode
(no CRLF translation) instead of text mode. Defaults to set (binary
mode). By default, devices are opened in binary mode, so this option
@ -24,24 +24,24 @@ pipe to binary by default.
always open in binary mode.</para></warning>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para><FirstTerm>check_case:level</FirstTerm> - Controls the behaviour of
<para><envar>check_case:level</envar> - Controls the behaviour of
Cygwin when a user tries to open or create a file using a case different from
the case of the path as asved on the disk.
<literal>level</literal> is one of <literal>relaxed</literal>,
<literal>adjust</literal> and <literal>strict</literal>.</para>
<itemizedlist Mark="bullet">
<listitem>
<para><FirstTerm>relaxed</FirstTerm> which is the default behaviour simply
<para><envar>relaxed</envar> which is the default behaviour simply
ignores case. That's the default for native Windows applications as well.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para><FirstTerm>adjust</FirstTerm> behaves mostly invisible. The POSIX input
<para><envar>adjust</envar> behaves mostly invisible. The POSIX input
path is internally adjusted in case, so that the resulting DOS path uses the
correct case throughout. You can see the result when changing the directory
using a wrong case and calling <command>/bin/pwd</command> afterwards.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para><FirstTerm>strict</FirstTerm> results in a error message if the case
<para><envar>strict</envar> results in a error message if the case
isn't correct. Trying to open a file <filename>Foo</filename> while a file
<filename>fOo</filename> exists results in a "no such file or directory"
error. Trying to create a file <filename>BAR</filename> while a file
@ -52,7 +52,7 @@ case" error.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para><FirstTerm>codepage:[ansi|oem]</FirstTerm> - Windows console
<para><envar>codepage:[ansi|oem]</envar> - Windows console
applications can use different character sets (codepages) for drawing
characters. The first setting, called "ansi", is the default.
This character set contains various forms of latin characters used
@ -68,22 +68,33 @@ Cygwin, you can use this option to select an appropriate codepage.
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para><FirstTerm>(no)envcache</FirstTerm> - If set, environment variable
<para><envar>(no)envcache</envar> - If set, environment variable
conversions (between Win32 and POSIX) are cached. Note that this is may
cause problems if the mount table changes, as the cache is not invalidated
and may contain values that depend on the previous mount table
contents. Defaults to set.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para><FirstTerm>(no)export</FirstTerm> - if set, the final values of these
settings are re-exported to the environment as $CYGWIN again.</para>
<para><envar>(no)export</envar> - if set, the final values of these
settings are re-exported to the environment as <envar>CYGWIN</envar> again.
Defaults to off.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para><FirstTerm>error_start:filepath</FirstTerm> - if set, runs <filename>filepath</filename>
when cygwin encounters a fatal error. This is useful for debugging.
<filename>filepath</filename> is usually set to the path to the <filename>gdb</filename>
program.</para>
<para><FirstTerm>(no)glob[:ignorecase]</FirstTerm> - if set, command line arguments
<para><envar>error_start:filepath</envar> - if set, runs
<filename>filepath</filename> when cygwin encounters a fatal error. This is
useful for debugging. <filename>filepath</filename> is usually set to the path
to the <command>gdb</command> or <command>dumper</command> program.
There is no default set.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para><envar>forkchunk:32768</envar> - causes <function>fork()</function>
to copy memory some number of bytes at a time, in the above example
32768 bytes (32Kb) at a time. The default is to copy as many bytes as
possible, which is preferable in most cases but may slow some older systems
down.
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para><envar>(no)glob[:ignorecase]</envar> - if set, command line arguments
containing UNIX-style file wildcard characters (brackets, question mark,
asterisk, escaped with \) are expanded into lists of files that match
those wildcards.
@ -93,40 +104,41 @@ Default is set.</para>
If supplied, wildcard matching is case insensitive. The default is <literal>noignorecase</literal></para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para><FirstTerm>(no)ntea</FirstTerm> - if set, use the full NT Extended
<para><envar>(no)ntea</envar> - if set, use the full NT Extended
Attributes to store UNIX-like inode information.
This option only operates under Windows NT. Defaults to not set. </para>
<Warning><Title>Warning!</Title> <para>This may create additional
<emphasis>large</emphasis> files on non-NTFS partitions.</para></Warning>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para><FirstTerm>(no)ntsec</FirstTerm> - if set, use the NT security
<para><envar>(no)ntsec</envar> - if set, use the NT security
model to set UNIX-like permissions on files and processes. The
file permissions can only be set on NTFS partitions. FAT doesn't
support the NT file security. For more information, read the documentation
in <citation>ntsec.sgml</citation>.</para>
support the NT file security. Defaults to set. For more information, read
the documentation in <Xref Linkend="ntsec">.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para><FirstTerm>(no)smbntsec</FirstTerm> - if set, use `ntsec' on remote
<para><envar>(no)smbntsec</envar> - if set, use <envar>ntsec</envar> on remote
drives as well (this is the default). If you encounter problems with NT shares
or Samba drives, setting this to `nosmbntsec' could help. In that case the
permission and owner/group information is faked as on FAT partitions.
A reason for a non working ntsec on remote drives could be insufficient
permissions of the users. Since the needed user rights are somewhat dangerous
(SeRestorePrivilege) it's not always an option to grant that rights to users.
However, this shouldn't be a problem in NT domain environments.</para>
or Samba drives, setting this to <envar>nosmbntsec</envar> could help. In that
case the permission and owner/group information is faked as on FAT partitions.
A reason for a non working <envar>ntsec</envar> on remote drives could be
insufficient permissions of the users. Since the needed user rights are
somewhat dangerous (SeRestorePrivilege) it's not always an option to grant that
rights to users. However, this shouldn't be a problem in NT domain
environments.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para><FirstTerm>(no)reset_com</FirstTerm> - if set, serial ports are reset
<para><envar>(no)reset_com</envar> - if set, serial ports are reset
to 9600-8-N-1 with no flow control when used. This is done at open
time and when handles are inherited. Defaults to set.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para><FirstTerm>(no)strip_title</FirstTerm> - if set, strips the directory
<para><envar>(no)strip_title</envar> - if set, strips the directory
part off the window title, if any. Default is not set.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para><FirstTerm>(no)title</FirstTerm> - if set, the title bar
<para><envar>(no)title</envar> - if set, the title bar
reflects the name of the program currently running. Default is not
set. Note that under Win9x the title bar is always enabled and it is
stripped by default, but this is because of the way Win9x works. In
@ -134,7 +146,7 @@ order not to strip, specify <literal>title</literal> or <literal>title
nostrip_title</literal>.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para><FirstTerm>(no)tty</FirstTerm> - if set, Cygwin enables extra support
<para><envar>(no)tty</envar> - if set, Cygwin enables extra support
(i.e., termios) for UNIX-like ttys.
It is not compatible with some Windows programs.
Defaults to not set, in which case the tty is opened in text mode
@ -144,7 +156,7 @@ This option must be specified before starting a Cygwin shell
and it cannot be changed in the shell.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para><FirstTerm>(no)winsymlinks</FirstTerm> - if set, Cygwin creates
<para><envar>(no)winsymlinks</envar> - if set, Cygwin creates
symlinks as Windows shortcuts with a special header and the R/O attribute
set. If not set, Cygwin creates symlinks as plain files with a magic number,
a path and the system attribute set. Defaults to set.</para>

View File

@ -91,13 +91,21 @@ you will probably want to use the complete syntax:</para>
-Wl,--out-implib=lib${module}.dll.a \
-Wl,--export-all-symbols \
-Wl,--enable-auto-import \
-Wl,--whole-archive ${old_lib} \
-Wl,--whole-archive ${old_libs} \
-Wl,--no-whole-archive ${dependency_libs}</screen>
<para>Where ${module} is the name of your DLL, ${old_lib} are all
<para>
The name of your library is <literal>${module}</literal>, prefixed with
<literal>cyg</literal> for the DLL and <literal>lib</literal> for the
import library. Cygwin DLLs use the <literal>cyg</literal> prefix to
differentiate them from native-Windows MinGW DLLs, see
<ulink URL="http://mingw.org">the MinGW website</ulink> for more details.
<literal>${old_libs}</literal> are all
your object files, bundled together in static libs or single object
files and the ${dependency_libs} are import libs you need to
link against, e.g '-lpng -lz -L/usr/local/special -lmyspeciallib'.</para>
files and the <literal>${dependency_libs}</literal> are import libs you
need to link against, e.g
<userinput>'-lpng -lz -L/usr/local/special -lmyspeciallib'</userinput>.
</para>
</sect2>
<sect2 id="dll-link"><title>Linking Against DLLs</title>

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@ -83,7 +83,7 @@ Windows programs, use a DOS prompt, running only the occasional Cygwin
command or script. Next would be to run <command>bash</command> with
the default DOS box. To make Cygwin more Unix compatible in this case,
set <EnVar>CYGWIN=tty</EnVar> (see <Xref Linkend="using-cygwinenv">).
Alternatively, the optional <command>rxvt</command> package provides
Alternatively, the optional <systemitem>rxvt</systemitem> package provides
a native-Windows version of the popular X11 terminal emulator (it is not
necessary to set <EnVar>CYGWIN=tty</EnVar> with <command>rxvt</command>).
Using <command>rxvt.exe</command> provides the most Unix-like environment,
@ -94,14 +94,15 @@ but expect some compatibility problems with Windows programs.
<sect2> <title>Cygwin and Windows Networking</title>
<para>
Many popular Cygwin packages, such as <command>ncftp</command>,
<command>lynx</command>, and <command>wget</command>, require a
Many popular Cygwin packages, such as <systemitem>ncftp</systemitem>,
<systemitem>lynx</systemitem>, and <systemitem>wget</systemitem>, require a
network connection. Since Cygwin relies on Windows for connectivity,
if one of these tools is not working as expected you may need to
troubleshoot using Windows tools. The first test is to see if you
can reach the URL's host with <command>ping.exe</command>, one of the
few utilities included with every Windows version since Windows 95.
If you chose to install the inetutils package, you may have both
If you chose to install the <systemitem>inetutils</systemitem> package,
you may have both
Windows and Cygwin versions of utilities such as <command>ftp</command>
and <command>telnet</command>. If you are having problems using one
of these programs, see if the alternate one works as expected.
@ -127,10 +128,10 @@ programs in your environment.
<sect2><title>The cygutils package</title>
<para>
The optional cygutils package contains miscellaneous tools that are
The optional <systemitem>cygutils</systemitem> package contains miscellaneous tools that are
small enough to not require their own package. It is not included in a
default Cygwin install; select it from the Utils category in
<command>setup.exe</command>. Several of the cygutils tools are useful
<command>setup.exe</command>. Several of the <systemitem>cygutils</systemitem> tools are useful
for interacting with Windows.
</para>
@ -138,7 +139,7 @@ for interacting with Windows.
One of the hassles of Unix-Windows interoperability is the different line
endings on text files. As mentioned in <Xref Linkend="using-textbinary">,
Unix tools such as <command>tr</command> can convert between CRLF and LF
endings, but cygutils provides several dedicated programs:
endings, but <systemitem>cygutils</systemitem> provides several dedicated programs:
<command>conv</command>, <command>d2u</command>, <command>dos2unix</command>,
<command>u2d</command>, and <command>unix2dos</command>. Use the
<literal>--help</literal> switch for usage information.
@ -153,7 +154,8 @@ different. By default, Cygwin uses a mechanism that creates symbolic
links that are compatible with standard Microsoft .lnk files. However,
they do not include much of the information that is available in a
standard Microsoft shortcut, such as the working directory, an icon,
etc. The cygutils package includes a <command>mkshortcut</command>
etc. The <systemitem>cygutils</systemitem> package includes a
<command>mkshortcut</command>
utility for creating standard Microsoft .lnk files.
</para>
@ -172,8 +174,8 @@ Windows shortcuts.
<sect2><title>Printing with cygutils</title>
<para>
There are several options for printing from Cygwin, including the
<command>lpr</command> found in cygutils (not to be confused with the
native Windows <command>lpr.exe</command>). The easiest way to use cygutils'
<command>lpr</command> found in <systemitem>cygutils</systemitem> (not to be confused with the
native Windows <command>lpr.exe</command>). The easiest way to use <systemitem>cygutils</systemitem>'
<command>lpr</command> is to specify a default device name in the
<EnVar>PRINTER</EnVar> environment variable. You may also specify a device
on the command line with the <literal>-d</literal> or <literal>-P</literal>
@ -194,8 +196,9 @@ the backslash as an escape character.
<command>lpr</command> sends raw data to the printer; no formatting is done.
Many, but not all, printers accept plain text as input. If your printer
supports PostScript, packages such as
<command>a2ps</command> and <command>enscript</command> can prepare text
files for printing. The ghostscript package also provides some translation
<systemitem>a2ps</systemitem> and <systemitem>enscript</systemitem> can prepare
text files for printing. The <systemitem>ghostscript</systemitem> package also
provides some translation
from PostScript to various native printer languages. Additionally, a native
Windows application for printing PostScript, <command>gsprint</command>, is
available from the <ulink URL="http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~ghost/">Ghostscript

View File

@ -576,6 +576,18 @@ Unix emulation environment and defining _WIN32 confuses some programs
which think that they have to make special concessions for a Windows
environment which Cygwin handles automatically.
Note that using -mno-cygwin replaces __CYGWIN__ with __MINGW32__ as to
tell which compiler (or settings) you're running.
Check this out in detail by running, for example
@example
$ gcc -dM -E -xc /dev/null >gcc.txt
$ gcc -mno-cygwin -dM -E -xc /dev/null >gcc-mno-cygwin.txt
$ gcc -mwin32 -dM -E -xc /dev/null >gcc-mwin32.txt
@end example
Then use the diff and grep utilities to check
what the difference is.
@subsection How should I port my Unix GUI to Windows?
There are two basic strategies for porting Unix GUIs to Windows.

View File

@ -292,6 +292,30 @@ when needed.
</para>
</sect2>
<sect2><title>The /proc filesystem</title>
<para>
Cygwin, like Linux and other similar operating systems, supports the
<filename>/proc</filename> virtual filesystem. The files in this
directory are representations of various aspects of your system,
for example the command <userinput>cat /proc/cpuinfo</userinput>
displays information such as what model and speed processor you have.
</para>
<para>
One unique aspect of the Cygwin <filename>/proc</filename> filesystem
is <filename>/proc/registry</filename>, which displays the Windows
registry with each <literal>KEY</literal> as a directory and each
<literal>VALUE</literal> as a file. As anytime you deal with the
Windows registry, use caution since changes may result in an unstable
or broken system.
</para>
<para>
The Cygwin <filename>/proc</filename> is not as complete as the
one in Linux, but it provides significant capabilities. The
<systemitem>procps</systemitem> package contains several utilities
that use it.
</para>
</sect2>
<sect2><title>The @pathnames</title>
<para>To circumvent the limitations on shell line length in the native
Windows command shells, Cygwin programs expand their arguments

View File

@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
<sect1><title>Internet Setup</title>
<para>To install the Cygwin net release, go to <ulink
URL="http://cygwin.com/">http://cygwin.com/</ulink> and click on <ulink
URL="http://cygwin.com/">"Install Cygwin Now!"</ulink>. This will
URL="http://cygwin.com/setup.exe">"Install Cygwin Now!"</ulink>. This will
download a GUI installer called <command>setup.exe</command> which can
be run to download a complete cygwin installation via the internet.
Follow the instructions on each screen to install Cygwin.
@ -141,9 +141,9 @@ For each selected mirror site, <command>setup.exe</command> downloads a
small text file called <literal>setup.bz2</literal> that contains a list
of packages available from that site along with some basic information about
each package which <command>setup.exe</command> parses and uses to create the
chooser window. For details about the format of this file, see
<ulink URL="http://sources.redhat.com/cygwin-apps/setup.html#setup.ini">
http://sources.redhat.com/cygwin-apps/setup.html</ulink>.
chooser window. For details about the format of this file, see
the <ulink URL="http://sources.redhat.com/cygwin-apps/setup.html">
setup.exe homepage</ulink>.
</para>
<para>
The chooser is the most complex part of <command>setup.exe</command>.
@ -155,7 +155,10 @@ will install only the packages in the <literal>Base</literal> category
and their dependencies, resulting in a minimal Cygwin installation.
However, this will not include many commonly used tools such as
<command>gcc</command> (which you will find in the <literal>Devel</literal>
category).
category). Since <command>setup.exe</command> automatically selects
dependencies, be careful not to unselect any required packages. In
particular, everything in the <literal>Base</literal> category is
required.
</para>
<para>
You can change <command>setup.exe</command>'s view style, which is helpful
@ -191,7 +194,8 @@ though mirrors have at least one previous version and occasionally there
is a testing or beta version of a package available. To see these package,
click on the <literal>Prev</literal> or <literal>Exp</literal> radio button.
Be warned, however, that the next time you run <command>setup.exe</command>
it will try to replace old or experimental versions with the latest.
it will try to replace old or experimental versions with the current
stable version.
</para>
</sect2>