| README for Android "acp" Command |
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| The "cp" command was judged and found wanting. The issues are: |
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| Mac OS X: |
| - Uses the BSD cp, not the fancy GNU cp. It lacks the "-u" flag, which |
| only copies files if they are newer than the destination. This can |
| slow the build when copying lots of content. |
| - Doesn't take the "-d" flag, which causes symlinks to be copied as |
| links. This is the default behavior, so it's not all bad, but it |
| complains if you supply "-d". |
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| MinGW/Cygwin: |
| - Gets really weird when copying a file called "foo.exe", failing with |
| "cp: skipping file 'foo.exe', as it was replaced while being copied". |
| This only seems to happen when the source file is on an NFS/Samba |
| volume. "cp" works okay copying from local disk. |
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| Linux: |
| - On some systems it's possible to have microsecond-accurate timestamps |
| on an NFS volume, and non-microsecond timestamps on a local volume. |
| If you copy from NFS to local disk, your NFS files will always be |
| newer, because the local disk time stamp is truncated rather than |
| rounded up. This foils the "-u" flag if you also supply the "-p" flag |
| to preserve timestamps. |
| - The Darwin linker insists that ranlib be current. If you copy the |
| library, the time stamp no longer matches. Preserving the time |
| stamp is essential, so simply turning the "-p" flag off doesn't work. |
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| Futzing around these in make with GNU make functions is awkward at best. |
| It's easier and more reliable to write a cp command that works properly. |
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| The "acp" command takes most of the standard flags, following the GNU |
| conventions. It adds a "-e" flag, used when copying executables around. |
| On most systems it is ignored, but on MinGW/Cygwin it allows "cp foo bar" |
| to work when what is actually meant is "cp foo.exe bar.exe". Unlike the |
| default Cygwin cp, "acp foo bar" will not find foo.exe unless you add |
| the "-e" flag, avoiding potential ambiguity. |
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