From fcbfe98cbe7d6332ee0673f685b280f7c019cd44 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Paul Smith Date: Fri, 23 Jun 2000 15:55:46 +0000 Subject: * Fix -q so it works more correctly. * Don't print "nothing to do" messages for ":" commands * Update the version to 3.79.1 --- README.template | 11 +++++++++++ 1 file changed, 11 insertions(+) (limited to 'README.template') diff --git a/README.template b/README.template index f131fd6..6581046 100644 --- a/README.template +++ b/README.template @@ -121,3 +121,14 @@ files (LFS) in configure for those operating systems that provide it. Please report any bugs that you find in this area. If you run into difficulties, then as a workaround you should be able to disable LFS by adding the `--disable-largefile' option to the `configure' script. + +On systems that support micro- and nano-second timestamp values and +where stat(2) provides this information, GNU make will use it when +comparing timestamps to get the most accurate possible result. However, +at the moment there is no system call (that I'm aware of) that will +allow you to *set* a timestamp to a micro- or nano-second granularity. +This means that "cp -p" and other similar tools (tar, etc.) cannot +exactly duplicate timestamps with micro- and nano-second granularity. +If your build system contains rules that depend on proper behavior of +tools like "cp -p", you should configure make to not use micro- and +nano-second timestamps with the --disable-nsec-timestamps flag. -- cgit v1.2.3