88f721549d
md5sum is part of busybox, so is probably available unless it were compiled out. If md5sum (or cut for that matter) is not available, it will still use the whole path to $base, otherwise hash it. Of course it's possible for md5sum to be available sometimes and not others on the same system; in such an event the locales would be built twice for the same bundle. The cleanup code will delete both sets once that version of the bundle is upgraded. |
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.. | ||
git | ||
git-annex | ||
git-annex-shell | ||
git-annex-webapp | ||
git-receive-pack | ||
git-shell | ||
git-upload-pack | ||
README | ||
runshell |
You can put this directory into your PATH, or symlink the programs in this directory to anyplace already in your PATH, and use git-annex the same as if you'd installed it using a package manager. Or, you can use the runshell script in this directory to start a shell that is configured to use git-annex and the other utilities included in this bundle, including git, gpg, rsync, ssh, etc. This should work on any Linux system of the appropriate architecture. More or less. How it works: This directory tree contains a lot of libraries and programs that git-annex needs. But it's not a chroot. Instead, runshell sets a lot of environment variables to cause files from here to be used, and a shim around the binaries arranges for them to be run with the libraries in here. It shouldn't even be dependent on the host system's glibc libraries. All that's needed is a kernel that supports the glibc included in this bundle.