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Sophie

distrib > Mageia > 6 > x86_64 > by-pkgid > 477b57103dc33cefe87b6cf3ae6ce158 > files > 9

cdrkit-1.1.11-9.mga6.x86_64.rpm

You may have heard from a certain person that cdrkit is not portable and you
may need some help to decide whether you shall believe him/her or not. It is,
as usual, recommended to make your own opinion before adopting someone elses
which may be biased.

What is portability? Portability is the ability for being compiled and
deployed on a platform that an application supports. It is obvious that nobody
can promise the unlimited portability especially not to operating systems to do
not exist yet or that are long dead (dead like in: unsupported, unmaintained for
many years, needing hardware which is not available in stores for many years).
And there could always undocumented bugs which means that real life tests
should be done on the target platform(s) again and again.

Therefore, unlimited portability is pure utopia. It is required to define a
certain degree of portability to meet the needs of the target user base.

How does that work in scope of cdrkit? Main target are mainstream platforms.
Currently, it supports Linux, FreeBSD, Cygwin (Win32), SunOS and AIX5l. This
set should cover the majority of general purpose computer systems in the wild.

Cdrkit sets some requirements on the targeted operating systems. However, most
modern unix-like OS should be able to fullfill them. Those requirements
include:

 - an ANSI-C compiler, or a GCC port
 - GNU make port
 - Large File Support
 - sane libc library
 - some prerequisites to bootstrap CMake

This cuts off support for really old operating systems, but... do you care? Do
you need it? Or do you want to believe the tales of superiority through (just
claimed) portability?