>> I've been using and compiling fvwm on HP-UX since version 0.99
>> something. I've always used HP's C compiler and make. I can't remember
>> when was the last time it didn't compile out of the box.
>
> What do you do for imake?
>
(-: Not an official HP response or advertisement :-)
Imake used to be available on a HP ftp server accessible from the
"outside" (hpcvaaz.cv.hp.com). The current imake I have, may or not have
been obtained there, as I've installed a few different versions from a
few different (HP) places, some that work on my system, some that don't,
that I've lost track.
Same goes for Xaw and Xmu, which along with imake, HP doesn't ship on
9.0x, and rather points to public sites. This may have changed at 10.x,
but I'm not sure what the "official line" is. A good place to get HP-UX
stuff is at the archives maintained by the University of Liverpool, which
are mirrored at the University of Wisconsin, and a few other places,
http://hpux.cae.wisc.edu,
http://hpux.csc.liv.ac.uk, etc.
> My HPUX 9.03 doesn't have it, I had to install X11R5. Is this normal for
> HPUX?
X11R5 development is probably an optional product, as is the "real C"
compiler, for example. X11R5 run time libraries is probably part of the
core HP-UX, as is the brain dead C compiler used to regen the kernel.
-- Henrique (martins_at_hpl.hp.com)
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Received on Fri Feb 09 1996 - 13:51:42 GMT