Opened 13 years ago
The file you submitted didn't even pass a port lint check, much less build the software correctly (at least not for me on a MacBook Pro with Mac OS X 10.4.11, Xcode 2.5 and MacPorts 1.6.0). I consulted Snoopy's Installing on Mac OS X page to make my changes. Download Snoopy vs Red Baron for Mac to 1/2 player arcade combat game. Mac OS X 10.2 or newer (older version for OS X 10.0 and 10.1 still available - see alternate download link).
Closed 13 years ago
Last modified 12 years ago Sky jumper (treestudiosuniverse) mac os.
#16609closedsubmission (fixed)
Reported by: | Owned by: | ryandesign (Ryan Schmidt) | |
---|---|---|---|
Priority: | Normal | Milestone: | |
Component: | ports | Version: | 1.6.0 |
Keywords: | Cc: | ||
Port: | snoopy |
Attachments (3)
- snoopy.tcl (1.0 KB) - added by pandagoat@…13 years ago.
- portfile
- Portfile.diff (1.9 KB) - added by ryandesign (Ryan Schmidt)13 years ago.
- Portfile-snoopy.diff (1.9 KB) - added by pandagoat@…13 years ago.
- Patch file for a newer version of snoopy. I was not sure if the patch needed to patch the very first Portfile I submitted or the newest patched Portfile. So this patch is for the original that I submitted. I removed the applying the .diff for brain.c since I have the fix in the code.
Download all attachments as: .zip
Change History (14)
Changed 13 years ago by pandagoat@…
comment:1 Changed 13 years ago by ryandesign (Ryan Schmidt)
Owner: | changed from macports-tickets@… to ryandesign@… |
---|---|
Port: | snoopy added |
Status: | new → assigned |
Changed 13 years ago by ryandesign (Ryan Schmidt)
comment:2follow-up: 3 Changed 13 years ago by ryandesign (Ryan Schmidt)
comment:3 in reply to: 2 Changed 13 years ago by pandagoat@…
comment:4follow-up: 5 Changed 13 years ago by ryandesign (Ryan Schmidt)
comment:5 in reply to: 4 Changed 13 years ago by pandagoat@…
comment:6 Changed 13 years ago by blb@…
comment:7 Changed 13 years ago by ryandesign (Ryan Schmidt)
Changed 13 years ago by pandagoat@…
comment:8 Changed 13 years ago by pandagoat@…
comment:9 Changed 12 years ago by raimue (Rainer Müller)
comment:10 Changed 12 years ago by jmroot (Joshua Root)
comment:11 Changed 12 years ago by (none)
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I posted this in the Leopard forum, but it appears that I was incorrect in doing that, so..
I am a long time PC user making a valiant effort to move to MAC. I am attempting to find a painless way to update a flash drive with some data that has to move between my office and home machines. There are a lot of files, but only a few change each day, and I have to make sure that an older file never overwrites a newer file with the same name.
On the PC I would simply fire up a command prompt and use the following xcopy command:
'xcopy pathdir1 . pathdir2 /s /h /r /c /d'
This would copy all of the files in dir1 to dir2, including all subdirectories (/s); including all hidden files (/h); including all read-only files (/r); continuing on, rather than erroring out, if a glitch develops (/c); and copying only files that are newer than those already in the target directory where the same file exists in both directories (/d)
I've been told that the 'cp' command is what I want, but a review of the man file does not indicate anything similar to the /d parameter. Apparently some versions of the linux cp command allow a -u parameter, which seems to be similar, but OS X doesn't like that.
I need to make sure that an older file is never copied over a newer file, so the equivalent of the /d parameter is necessary.
What am I missing?
thanks..Bob
I am a long time PC user making a valiant effort to move to MAC. I am attempting to find a painless way to update a flash drive with some data that has to move between my office and home machines. There are a lot of files, but only a few change each day, and I have to make sure that an older file never overwrites a newer file with the same name.
On the PC I would simply fire up a command prompt and use the following xcopy command:
'xcopy pathdir1 . pathdir2 /s /h /r /c /d'
This would copy all of the files in dir1 to dir2, including all subdirectories (/s); including all hidden files (/h); including all read-only files (/r); continuing on, rather than erroring out, if a glitch develops (/c); and copying only files that are newer than those already in the target directory where the same file exists in both directories (/d)
I've been told that the 'cp' command is what I want, but a review of the man file does not indicate anything similar to the /d parameter. Apparently some versions of the linux cp command allow a -u parameter, which seems to be similar, but OS X doesn't like that.
I need to make sure that an older file is never copied over a newer file, so the equivalent of the /d parameter is necessary.
What am I missing?
thanks..Bob
Mac Os Versions
MacBook Pro 2.4 / MacPro 2.66, Mac OS X (10.4.10)
Snoopy Mac Os Update
Posted on Jun 5, 2008 1:51 PM