New section "Recent history of the project: What version *is* this, anyway?".
Rename section "A brief history of the project" to "Ancient history" and remove disclaimer about being out of date.
This commit is contained in:
		| @@ -51,10 +51,78 @@ charge a fee for it.  Plus, it provides income for the cygwin project so | ||||
| we can continue working on it.  For further details about the commercial | ||||
| product, see @file{http://www.cygnus.com/cygwin/}. | ||||
|  | ||||
| @section A brief history of the project | ||||
| @section Recent history of the project: What version @emph{is} this, anyway? | ||||
|  | ||||
| @strong{(Please note: This section has not yet been updated for the latest | ||||
| net release.)} | ||||
| Starting on April 17, 2000, the Cygwin team changed the procedure for | ||||
| doing net releases. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Previously, net releases entailed downloading one or two large files | ||||
| (called something like @code{FULL.EXE} or @code{USER.EXE}).  These files | ||||
| unpacked a "Cygwin Distribution" to a static (and arcane) directory | ||||
| structure.  This distribution contained lots of .exe, .a, .h, and other | ||||
| files. | ||||
|  | ||||
| These distributions were named after the version of the Cygwin DLL which | ||||
| they contained.  The last version released with this method was Cygwin | ||||
| B20.1. | ||||
|  | ||||
| This distribution method has the advantage that everything was "all in | ||||
| one place".  You could copy the huge FULL.EXE file around and know that | ||||
| you were getting the complete "Cygwin Distribution". | ||||
|  | ||||
| The method had several disadvantages, however.  1) it was huge, 2) it | ||||
| was hard to download in one error-free piece, and 3) it was hard to | ||||
| update. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Why was it hard to update?  Because any change to any package in | ||||
| FULL.EXE meant re-generating all of FULL.EXE.  This process was not easy | ||||
| to automate since FULL.EXE was an InstallShield executable.  As a | ||||
| result, until recently, Cygwin development was relatively static. | ||||
|  | ||||
| To rectify these problems, the Cygwin team decided, early in January | ||||
| 2000, to break up the packages in the release and make a small program | ||||
| (@code{setup.exe}) available to use in downloading packages.  After much | ||||
| development and internal discussion on the cygwin-developers mailing | ||||
| list, the new, improved version of a Cygwin release was made available | ||||
| on April 17, 2000. | ||||
|  | ||||
| This new release also had a new version of the Cygwin DLL -- 1.1.0. | ||||
| Most of the other packages were updated and some packages from the | ||||
| Cygwin CD were included.  Meanwhile, the Cygwin DLL continues to be | ||||
| updated, and is more generically referred to as "1.1.x". | ||||
|  | ||||
| Users obtain this package by first downloading a version of | ||||
| @code{setup.exe}.  This program started as a simple command line tool, | ||||
| has metamorphosed into a GUI, and is in the process of continual | ||||
| improvement.  However, its purpose is simple -- it is designed to | ||||
| install packages from the cygwin web site at sources.redhat.com.  In | ||||
| effect, it is a smaller, more intelligent replacement for FULL.EXE.  It | ||||
| does not require the downloading a huge executable but rather downloads | ||||
| individual small packages. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Does this mean that the new net release of the Cygwin package is 1.1.x? | ||||
| No.  We no longer label the releases with the Cygwin version number. | ||||
| Each package in the cygwin release has its own version now. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Does this mean that Cygwin 1.1.x is newer than B20.1?  Yes!  The cygwin | ||||
| 1.1.x versions all represent continual improvement in the Cygwin DLL. | ||||
| Although the 1.1.x code is still considered "beta quality", the Cygwin | ||||
| team felt comfortable enough with the cygwin technology to bump the | ||||
| version number to "1". | ||||
|  | ||||
| The other packages in the latest directory are also continually | ||||
| improving, some thanks to the efforts of net volunteers who maintain the | ||||
| cygwin binary ports.  Each package has its own version numbers and | ||||
| its own release process. | ||||
|  | ||||
| So, how do you get the most up-to-date version of cygwin?  Easy.  Just | ||||
| download the setup.exe program from your closest mirror.  This program | ||||
| will handle the task of updating the packages on your system to the | ||||
| latest version.  The Cygwin team frequently updates and adds new | ||||
| packages to the soureware web site.  The setup.exe program is the | ||||
| easiest way to determine what you need on your system. | ||||
|  | ||||
| @section Ancient history of the project | ||||
|  | ||||
| The first thing done was to enhance the development tools (gcc, gdb, | ||||
| gas, et al) so that they could generate/interpret Win32 native object | ||||
|   | ||||
		Reference in New Issue
	
	Block a user