1. 25 Apr, 2005 1 commit
  2. 24 Mar, 2005 1 commit
  3. 19 Mar, 2005 1 commit
  4. 11 Mar, 2005 1 commit
  5. 14 Nov, 2004 1 commit
  6. 01 Nov, 2004 1 commit
  7. 28 Sep, 2004 1 commit
  8. 18 Aug, 2004 1 commit
  9. 29 Jul, 2004 1 commit
  10. 12 Jul, 2004 1 commit
  11. 01 Jul, 2004 1 commit
  12. 28 Jun, 2004 2 commits
  13. 06 May, 2004 2 commits
  14. 21 Apr, 2004 1 commit
  15. 02 Apr, 2004 1 commit
  16. 25 Mar, 2004 1 commit
  17. 23 Mar, 2004 2 commits
  18. 21 Mar, 2004 2 commits
  19. 17 Mar, 2004 3 commits
  20. 05 Mar, 2004 1 commit
  21. 04 Mar, 2004 1 commit
  22. 08 Feb, 2004 1 commit
  23. 29 Jan, 2004 4 commits
  24. 28 Jan, 2004 1 commit
  25. 22 Jan, 2004 1 commit
    • Richard Levitte's avatar
      [Merged from the main trunk] · 1a4dc04d
      Richard Levitte authored
      Adding a slash between the directoryt and the file is a problem with
      VMS.  The C RTL can handle it well if the "directory" is a logical
      name with no colon, therefore ending being 'logname/file'.  However,
      if the given logical names actually has a colon, or if you use a full
      VMS-syntax directory, you end up with 'logname:/file' or
      'dev:[dir1.dir2]/file', and that isn't handled in any good way.
      
      So, on VMS, we need to check if the directory string ends with a
      separator (one of ':', ']' or '>' (< and > can be used instead [ and
      ])), and handle that by not inserting anything between the directory
      spec and the file name.  In all other cases, it's assumed the
      directory spec is a logical name, so we need to place a colon between
      it and the file.
      
      Notified by Kevin Greaney <kevin.greaney@hp.com>.
      1a4dc04d
  26. 21 Jan, 2004 1 commit
  27. 19 Jan, 2004 1 commit
  28. 18 Jan, 2004 1 commit
  29. 01 Dec, 2003 1 commit
  30. 29 Nov, 2003 2 commits