|  | Date Of Receipt: 	13-MAY-1993 16:28:09.78
From: 	WASTED::"[email protected]" "Madeline Barcia-Asmus AOSG"
To: 	32.594::wolfe
CC: 	[email protected], [email protected]
Subj: 	Re: problems building notepad in ode environment
 >>
 >>
 >>Hello buildhelp, 
 >>
 >>I am trying to build notepad for agxmaint. I have a sandbox, did a mklinks,
 >>copied down a few changed .c files that I want to build with and did
 >>a make (since Motif stuff uses the Makefiles). I immediately get an
 >>error message:
 >>
 >>Aleta> make
 >>Make: Don't know how to make /usr/sde/osf1/build/agxmaint.bld/tools/alpha_osf1/c
 >>c/usr/include/sys/param.h.  Stop.
 >>
 >>The problem seems to be agxmaint.bld. That is not a valid directory. I am
 >>backed against agxmaint.nightly (vs. agxmaint) because, for reasons
 >>that I do not understand, agxmaint does not have the X11 directory and there
fore
 >>none of the required H files.
 >>
 >>
 >>Here is the output from currentsb:
 >> Aleta> currentsb -all
 >>ootb Peter_Wolfe_ootb /usr/users/wolfe/sandboxes . /usr/users/wolfe/sandboxes/oo
 >>tb/rc_files/local /usr/sde/disks/darla_ra114c/agxmaint.nightly
 >>
 >>
 >>Please help,
 >>
 >>			pete
 >>
 >>
agxmaint , is a submit tree, which by definition of submit tree  we do
not  "build"  in it. 
X11 is a result of a build.
As for the reference to  agxmaint.bld, this is a known feature.  The build occurs in
a place called  agxmaint.bld and then the results get populated into 
agxmaint.nightly.
As a result,  the path is explicitly  expanded in the imake files to 
 /usr/sde/osf1/build/agxmaint.bld/....   
so the solution 'X' folks have used thus far is the following :
mkdir /usr/build/osf1/
in there make a link
 ln -s  agxmaint.bld --> where you find the agxmaint.nightly is mounted
		           on your machine .
-Madeline
 | 
|  | Date Of Receipt: 	13-FEB-1995 19:53:37.55
From: 	SMURF::ALPHA::shashi "Shashi Mangalat USG"
To: 	[email protected]
CC: 	buildhelp@DEC:.zko.alpha
Subj: 	Re: nm
>Do you
>guys know an easy way to do this?  The only way I know of is to run nm 
>against every .o using find, collect the output in a file, and search the 
>file for the symbol then page up or down to identify the file.
I don't know of a better way, but this might help a little.  There is
new option '-A' to nm which prepends the file name to each symbol.
So you could nm all .o's and pipe it through grep.
--shashi
 |