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Re: Please check about the GIT problem.
From: |
Henrik Carlqvist |
Subject: |
Re: Please check about the GIT problem. |
Date: |
Sat, 6 Apr 2024 16:14:37 +0200 |
On Sat, 6 Apr 2024 16:50:33 +0900 (KST)
12zz12 <12zz12@kakao.com> wrote:
> root@uk91-Korea:/home/u/ë¤ì´ë¡ë# tar -zxf git-2.38.5.tar.gz
> root@uk91-Korea:/home/u/ë¤ì´ë¡ë# ls
> git-2.38.5 git-2.38.5.tar.gz google-chrome-stable_current_amd64.deb
> root@uk91-Korea:/home/u/ë¤ì´ë¡ë# cd git-2.38.5
> root@uk91-Korea:/home/u/ë¤ì´ë¡ë/git-2.38.5# ls
The "#" in your prompt indicate that you are running the commands as user
root. Usually it is considered best practice to build software as a normal
unprivilged user and switch to the root account only for the installation
step.
> make[2]: ëë í°ë¦¬ '/home/uk91/ë¤ì´ë¡ë/git-2.38.5' ëê°
> * new asciidoc flags
> ASCIIDOC git-add.html
> /bin/sh: 1: asciidoc: not found
This is why the build fails, you don't seem to have the asciidoc program
installed.
> root@uk91-Korea:/home/u/ë¤ì´ë¡ë/git-2.38.5# sudo make install ... -y
There is no need to use sudo if you are already root.
> install-doc install-html install-info -y make: ë¶ì ì í ìµì
-- 'y'
Make complains about the "-y", what was your intention of that? If that was
intended as an option for make, such options are usually placed before the
targets. However, gnu make does not have any "-y" option.
Even with a correct call of make the installation would fail if you previously
was unable to build.
regards Henrik