htsn 0.0.1 → 0.0.2
raw patch · 3 files changed
+29/−12 lines, 3 filesdep ~tasty
Dependency ranges changed: tasty
Files
- doc/htsnrc.example +11/−4
- doc/man1/htsn.1 +8/−3
- htsn.cabal +10/−5
doc/htsnrc.example view
@@ -1,8 +1,15 @@ # Example configuration file for htsn. For this to take effect, you-# would need to place it in either /etc/htsnrc or $HOME/.htsnrc. On-# Windows, it probably needs to go in %APPDATA%, or-# C:\Users\<username>\Application Data.-+# would need to place it in either the user or global configuration+# directories.+#+# For a user, that's either $HOME/.htsnrc on Unix or+# %APPDATA%\.htsnrc (e.g. C:\Users\<username>\Application+# Data\.htsnrc) on Windows.+#+# The global configuration directory is determined by Cabal. The+# "sysconfdir" parameter during the "configure" step will be used. On+# Unix, it's probably /etc, and this file will need to go in+# /etc/htsnrc. # Run in the background as a daemon? #
doc/man1/htsn.1 view
@@ -144,9 +144,14 @@ .P Any of the command-line options mentioned above can be specified in a configuration file instead. We first look for \(dqhtsnrc\(dq in the-system configuration directory (/etc on Unix). We then look for a file-named \(dq.htsnrc\(dq in the user's home directory. The latter will-override the former.+system configuration directory. We then look for a file named+\(dq.htsnrc\(dq in the user's home directory. The latter will override+the former.+.P+The user's home directory is simply $HOME on Unix; on Windows its+wherever %APPDATA% points. The system configuration directory is+determined by Cabal; the \(dqsysconfdir\(dq parameter during the+\(dqconfigure\(dq step is used. .P The file's syntax is given by examples in the htsnrc.example file (included with \fBhtsn\fR).
htsn.cabal view
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ name: htsn-version: 0.0.1+version: 0.0.2 cabal-version: >= 1.8 author: Michael Orlitzky maintainer: Michael Orlitzky <michael@orlitzky.com>@@ -185,10 +185,15 @@ . Any of the command-line options mentioned above can be specified in a configuration file instead. We first look for \"htsnrc\" in the- system configuration directory (/etc on Unix). We then look for a file- named \".htsnrc\" in the user's home directory. The latter will override+ system configuration directory. We then look for a file named+ \".htsnrc\" in the user's home directory. The latter will override the former. .+ The user's home directory is simply $HOME on Unix; on Windows its+ wherever %APPDATA% points. The system configuration directory+ is determined by Cabal; the /sysconfdir/ parameter during+ the \"configure\" step is used.+ . The file's syntax is given by examples in the htsnrc.example file (included with /htsn/). .@@ -209,7 +214,7 @@ hxt == 9.3.*, MissingH == 1.2.*, network == 2.4.*,- tasty == 0.5.*,+ tasty == 0.6.*, tasty-hunit == 0.4.*, transformers == 0.3.*, unix == 2.6.*@@ -271,7 +276,7 @@ hxt == 9.3.*, MissingH == 1.2.*, network == 2.4.*,- tasty == 0.5.*,+ tasty == 0.6.*, tasty-hunit == 0.4.*, transformers == 0.3.*, unix == 2.6.*