36 lines
1.3 KiB
Markdown
36 lines
1.3 KiB
Markdown
See [[todo/windows_support]]..
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## symlinks
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Apparently new versions of Windows have something very like symlinks.
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(Or really, 3 or so things not entirely unlike symlinks and all different.)
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Stackoverflow has some details.
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NTFS supports symbolic links two different ways: an [[!wikipedia NTFS symbolic link]] and an [[!wikipedia NTFS_junction_point]]. The former seems like the closest analogue to POSIX symlinks.
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Make git use them, as it (apparently) does not yet.
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Currently, on Windows, git checks out symlinks as files containing the symlink
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target as their contents.
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## POSIX
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Lots of ifdefs and pain to deal with POSIX calls in the code base.
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Or I could try to use Cygwin.
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## Deeper system integration
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[NTFS Reparse Points](http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa365503%28v=VS.85%29.aspx) allow a program to define how the OS will interpret a file or directory in arbitrary ways. This requires writing a file system filter.
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## Developement environment
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Someone wrote in to say:
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> For Windows Development you can easily qualify
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> for Bizspark - http://www.microsoft.com/bizspark/
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>
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> This will get you 100% free Windows OS licenses and
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> Dev tools, plus a free Azure account for cloud testing.
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> (You can also now deploy Linux VMs to Azure as well)
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> No money required at all.
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