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Chih-Hung Hsieh 2a5bc9dfbf
Use -Werror in build/make
7 years ago
..
Android.bp Use -Werror in build/make 7 years ago
README auto import from //depot/cupcake/@135843 15 years ago
acp.c Use -Werror in build/make 7 years ago

README

README for Android "acp" Command


The "cp" command was judged and found wanting. The issues are:

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".

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.

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.

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.


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.