A possible bug with changing the bootable image of a WIM was fixed.
Some advisory locking is now done to prevent two processes from
- modifying a WIM at the same time (but only in some cases). e.g. You
- cannot mount two images from a WIM read-write at the same time.
+ modifying a WIM at the same time (but only in some cases). For example,
+ you cannot mount two images from a WIM read-write at the same time.
Some functions have been reorganized:
* wimlib_mount() renamed to wimlib_mount_image().
wimlib may work on FreeBSD and Mac OS X. However, this is not well tested. If
you do not have libntfs-3g 2011-4-12 or later available, you must configure with
---without-ntfs-3g. Before mounting a WIM you need to load the POSIX message
-queue module (run `kldload mqueuefs').
+--without-ntfs-3g. On FreeBSD, before mounting a WIM you need to load the POSIX
+message queue module (run `kldload mqueuefs').
wimlib should work on big endian machines but it has not been tested.
# Maintainer: Eric Biggers <ebiggers3 at gmail dot com>
pkgname=wimlib
-pkgver=1.1.0
+pkgver=1.2.0
pkgrel=1
pkgdesc="A library to extract, create, and modify WIM files"
arch=("i686" "x86_64")
cd "$pkgname-$pkgver"
make DESTDIR="$pkgdir" install
}
-
-sha512sums=('6ad94bb7de9c6cadbbf50644dc3807ba993c1e149ce6a0d91380bfbfe59943bfa78fd06a835f426cc7b3dfa2c59a269abc2f3d4d8d12fb3681f72aeefbdb873a')
+wimlib (1.2.0-1) unstable; urgency=low
+
+ * Update to v1.2.0
+
+ -- Eric Biggers <ebiggers3@gmail.com> Thu, 22 Nov 2012 14:35:33 -0600
+
wimlib (1.1.0-1) unstable; urgency=low
* Update to v1.1.0
.TP
\fB--hardlink\fR
When extracting a file from the WIM that is identical to a file that has already
-extracted, create a hard link using \fBlink\fR (3) rather than creating a
-separate file. This option causes all identical files to be hard-linked,
-overriding the hard link groups that are specified in the WIM image(s). In the
-case of extracting all images from the WIM, files may be hard-linked even if
-they are in different WIM images. This option is not available in the NTFS
-extraction mode.
+extracted, create a hard link rather than creating a separate file. This option
+causes all identical files to be hard-linked, overriding the hard link groups
+that are specified in the WIM image(s). In the case of extracting all images
+from the WIM, files may be hard-linked even if they are in different WIM images.
+This option is not available in the NTFS extraction mode.
.TP
\fB--symlink\fR
This option is similar to \fB--hardlink\fR, except symbolic links are created
Summary: Library to extract, create, and modify WIM files
Name: wimlib
-Version: 1.1.0
+Version: 1.2.0
Release: 1
License: GPLv3+
Group: System/Libraries
Summary: Library to extract, create, and modify WIM files
Name: wimlib
-Version: 1.1.0
+Version: 1.2.0
Release: 1
License: GPLv3+
Group: System/Libraries
Summary: Library to extract, create, and modify WIM files
Name: wimlib
-Version: 1.1.0
+Version: 1.2.0
Release: 1
License: GPLv3+
Group: System/Libraries
*
* \section intro Introduction
*
+ * This is the documentation for the library interface of wimlib 1.2.0. If you
+ * have installed wimlib and want to know how to use the @c imagex program,
+ * please see the man pages instead.
+ *
* wimlib is a C library to read, write, and mount archive files in the Windows
* Imaging Format (WIM files). These files are normally created using the @c
* imagex.exe utility on Windows, but this library provides a free
* ::wimlib_progress_info.scan. */
WIMLIB_PROGRESS_MSG_SCAN_END,
- /**
+ /**
* File resources are currently being written to the WIM.
* @a info will point to ::wimlib_progress_info.write_streams. */
WIMLIB_PROGRESS_MSG_WRITE_STREAMS,
- /**
+ /**
* The metadata resource for each image is about to be written to the
* WIM. @a info will not be valid. */
WIMLIB_PROGRESS_MSG_WRITE_METADATA_BEGIN,
- /**
+ /**
* The metadata resource for each image has successfully been writen to
* the WIM. @a info will not be valid. */
WIMLIB_PROGRESS_MSG_WRITE_METADATA_END,
BSD_STAT=1
fi
-get_inode_number()
+get_inode_number()
{
if [ "$BSD_STAT" -eq 1 ]; then
stat -f %i "$1"