Most people should use stable LessTif releases.
People with specific problems that have just been fixed should
use the most recent version of the source, straight from the CVS repository.
If you want to use CVS, keep reading this text.
If not, you might want to go to the
download page.
We need people to test the current sources, so if you are up to it, go ahead!
It is however a good idea to subscribe to our
lesstif-commits
mailinglist
to stay informed what's actually going on.
To access CVS, first set the environment variable CVSROOT
to :pserver:[email protected]:/cvsroot/lesstif
.
How you do this depends on your shell. If you use the bourne shell (bash and
its descendants) you can type
export CVSROOT=:pserver:[email protected]:/cvsroot/lesstifIf you use csh, you will have to use the setenv command. After that, you have to login to CVS. You do this by typing cvs login. When prompted, just hit Enter (an empty password). After that, you can type cvs -z5 checkout lesstif to retrieve the sources for the first time.
You can also browse the CVS repository using your favourite web browser. This is obviously not useful for downloading the complete source tree. It is just a convenient way to use CVS's versioning mechanism to figure out exactly what has changed recently in specific files. Or just retrieve a few specific sources themselves. The browsable CVS is at http://cvs.sourceforge.net/cgi-bin/viewcvs.cgi/lesstif/lesstif.
To build LessTif from a CVS checkout you will also need libtool,
automake and autoconf.
For further informtaion please refer to our
installation instructions.
-P
option when
updating.
cvs update -d -P
~/.cvsrc
. Here's an example:
diff -u update -P -d cvs -q -z9
-D
option).
However some people forget that CVS remembers these settings ("sticky bit")
and won't update to the current level unless indicated to so.
Specifying the current date will only help once, better remove the sticky bits by the
-A
option.