Included note regarding the origin of "bonsaitools", per

bug 174922.
This commit is contained in:
mbarnson%sisna.com 2002-11-05 03:24:52 +00:00
parent e111303ea4
commit 0797b9e2df
2 changed files with 34 additions and 0 deletions

View File

@ -608,6 +608,23 @@ AllowOverride Limit
for Perl. This can be done using the following Perl one-liner, but
I suggest using the symlink approach to avoid upgrade hassles.
</para>
<note>
<para><quote>Bonsaitools</quote> is the name Terry Weissman, the
original author of Bugzilla, created
for his suite of webtools at the time he created Bugzilla and several
other tools in use at mozilla.org. He created a directory,
<filename>/usr/bonsaitools</filename> to house his specific versions
of perl and other utilities. This usage is still current at
<ulink url="http://bugzilla.mozilla.org/">bugzilla.mozilla.org</ulink>,
but in general most other places do not use it. You can either edit
the paths at the start of each perl file to the correct location of
perl on your system, or simply bow to history and create a
<filename>/usr/bonsaitools</filename> and <filename>/usr/bonsaitools/bin
</filename> directory, placing a symlink to perl on your system
inside <filename>/usr/bonsaitools/bin</filename>
</para>
</note>
<para>
<programlisting>

View File

@ -608,6 +608,23 @@ AllowOverride Limit
for Perl. This can be done using the following Perl one-liner, but
I suggest using the symlink approach to avoid upgrade hassles.
</para>
<note>
<para><quote>Bonsaitools</quote> is the name Terry Weissman, the
original author of Bugzilla, created
for his suite of webtools at the time he created Bugzilla and several
other tools in use at mozilla.org. He created a directory,
<filename>/usr/bonsaitools</filename> to house his specific versions
of perl and other utilities. This usage is still current at
<ulink url="http://bugzilla.mozilla.org/">bugzilla.mozilla.org</ulink>,
but in general most other places do not use it. You can either edit
the paths at the start of each perl file to the correct location of
perl on your system, or simply bow to history and create a
<filename>/usr/bonsaitools</filename> and <filename>/usr/bonsaitools/bin
</filename> directory, placing a symlink to perl on your system
inside <filename>/usr/bonsaitools/bin</filename>
</para>
</note>
<para>
<programlisting>