Mail Archives: cygwin/2008/04/11/13:07:13
Corinna Vinschen schrieb:
> On Apr 11 18:04, Tomasz Chmielewski wrote:
>> Corinna Vinschen schrieb:
>>> utf-8 is supposed to be able to convert all wide chars to a multibyte
>>> sequence. If it's *not* the above server-side problem, we would need a
>>> simple, self-contained, reproducible testcase, preferrably in plain C.
>> Is a file in an archive enough?
>>
>> It looks like it looses the special character in tar or zip, but 7zip can
>> store it just fine.
>
> What 7zip? Native or Cygwin?
I used native 7zip to store the file and copy it to another machine.
It is also possible to copy such a file to another machine using Windows
Neighbourhood.
> Better: Create a shell script which creates the file which makes
> trouble and send the script.
>
> Shortcut: Tell me what the actual filename is. I can switch to the
> german keyboard layout if necessary.
I've no idea how to create a file with such name.
I'm doing backups with rsync (sort of) and I was checking which files
are not copied - this was one of user files.
>> Mind that I use a German language Windows version - if the above doesn't
>> work for you, I can give you remote access if you want.
>
> Sorry, but, no. I will very certainly not do remote debugging.
>
> Btw., why don't you debug this? Strace, gdb, and the sysinternal
> tools are all free as in beer. As a start and as long as there's only
> one file in the test dir, you could also send the strace output of `ls
> test' as attachment to this list. This might help already.
I didn't even think of debugging this.
You can find a "ls -l" strace on http://wpkg.org/ls.strace.txt
stderr said:
ls: cannot access 1!.doc: No such file or directory
--
Tomasz Chmielewski
http://wpkg.org
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