freebsd-skq/usr.bin/csup
Ulrich Spörlein aa12cea2cc mdoc: order prologue macros consistently by Dd/Dt/Os
Although groff_mdoc(7) gives another impression, this is the ordering
most widely used and also required by mdocml/mandoc.

Reviewed by:	ru
Approved by:	philip, ed (mentors)
2010-04-14 19:08:06 +00:00
..
attrstack.c
attrstack.h
auth.c - Fix spelling. 2010-03-03 21:22:53 +00:00
auth.h
config.c
config.h
cpasswd.1 mdoc: order prologue macros consistently by Dd/Dt/Os 2010-04-14 19:08:06 +00:00
cpasswd.sh
csup.1 mdoc: order prologue macros consistently by Dd/Dt/Os 2010-04-14 19:08:06 +00:00
detailer.c
detailer.h
diff.c
diff.h
fattr_bsd.h
fattr_posix.h
fattr.c
fattr.h
fixups.c
fixups.h
fnmatch.c
fnmatch.h
globtree.c
globtree.h
idcache.c
idcache.h
keyword.c
keyword.h
lex.rcs.c
lister.c
lister.h
main.c
main.h
Makefile - Include CURDIR in case the makefile is not run from the same directory. 2010-03-03 16:45:58 +00:00
misc.c
misc.h
mux.c
mux.h
parse.y
pathcomp.c
pathcomp.h
proto.c
proto.h
queue.h
rcsfile.c
rcsfile.h
rcsparse.c
rcsparse.h
rcstokenizer.h
rcstokenizer.l
README
rsyncfile.c
rsyncfile.h
status.c
status.h
stream.c
stream.h
threads.c
threads.h
TODO - Unmark authentication support as a TODO item. 2010-03-02 07:37:35 +00:00
token.h
token.l
updater.c
updater.h

$FreeBSD$

Authors
-------

CVSup was originally written in Modula-3 by
	John Polstra <jdp@polstra.com>.

Csup is a rewrite of CVSup in C.  It has been mostly written by
	Maxime Henrion <mux@FreeBSD.org>.

A few contributors have helped him in his task and they are listed here in
alphabetical order :

	Olivier Houchard <cognet@FreeBSD.org>
	Ulf Lilleengen <lulf@kerneled.org>
	Christoph Mathys <cmathys@bluewin.ch>	(Google SoC Project)
	Etienne Vidal <etienne.vidal@gmail.com>


Building & Installing
---------------------

Csup should build and run fine under any *BSD OS (that includes FreeBSD,
NetBSD, OpenBSD and DragonFlyBSD), as well as Linux and Darwin.  If you
have a problem building from source, drop me a mail!

There is one Makefile specifically tailored for *BSD systems named
Makefile and another one that is gmake-specific for Darwin and Linux
users named GNUmakefile.  You don't really need to worry about that
since whatever your "make" command is, it should pick up the correct
Makefile.

As usual, to build the source code, just run "make".  Once this is done,
just run "make install" to install the binary and manual page.

Be warned however that if the packaging system of your OS knows about
csup, it is certainly better to install it from there rather than by
hand, so that it can then be properly deinstalled.