has been actively developed since 1997, and people have moved over to
graphical file managers.
+ NOTE: As of gnuit-4.9.2, the GNU interactive tools package has been
+ renamed. You can compile gnuit with the --disable-transition
+ option and then it will not conflict with git.
+
- You can use git after building but without installing if you
wanted to. Various git commands need to find other git
commands and scripts to do their work, so you would need to
that come with git (git includes the one from Mozilla, and has
its own PowerPC and ARM optimized ones too - see the Makefile).
- - "libcurl" and "curl" executable. git-http-fetch and
- git-fetch use them. If you do not use http
- transfer, you are probably OK if you do not have
- them.
+ - libcurl library; git-http-fetch and git-fetch use them. You
+ might also want the "curl" executable for debugging purposes.
+ If you do not use http transfer, you are probably OK if you
+ do not have them.
- expat library; git-http-push uses it for remote lock
management over DAV. Similar to "curl" above, this is optional.
- "perl" and POSIX-compliant shells are needed to use most of
the barebone Porcelainish scripts.
- - "cpio" is used by git-merge for saving and restoring the index,
- and by git-clone when doing a local (possibly hardlinked) clone.
-
- Some platform specific issues are dealt with Makefile rules,
but depending on your specific installation, you may not
have all the libraries/tools needed, or you may have