timboddy
timboddy
Upgrading to use Centos 8 will fix the issue in your case. I am not sure what is the earliest version of gcc that doesn't have the problem at present....
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/54150650/how-to-update-gcc-from-4-8-to-8-2-on-rhel7 seems to imply that you can stay on Centos7 but install devtoolset-8 to use gcc 8.2.1 without messing up your own installation. I have not tried this myself but...
@ogalbxela thank you for the great link. I have updated the code to use some c++17 features, and have changed the documentation accordingly.
I think this is resolved now because compilers prior to gcc 9 are no longer recommended.
Hi maqtech, I'm not sure that I fully understand your question but a guess might be that, given a reported memory leak, you would like to understand the stack trace....
If stack traces are important to you, what are your reservations about using some tool such as valgrind that actually does the instrumentation needed to be able to supply stack...
There are several answers as to why one might want to use chap even though other tools might exist. At the time I wrote it (or rather the not open...
Can you clarify why you think support for NTFS drives matters? In general chap is intended to be run on Linux, and the special characters you mention arrive automatically due...
From my perspective, the fact that Linux can mount a Linux file system does not mean that there is a strong need to be able to install chap on one....
With respect to the comment about btrfs, I am puzzled here. My impression is that btrfs supports file names of up to 255 characters, and the "File name too long"...