Remove option-describing comment block.

This commit is contained in:
Jim Meyering
2000-09-30 08:19:34 +00:00
parent e7f9f83fa1
commit 41939d7bfe
+1 -44
View File
@@ -15,50 +15,7 @@
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */
/* Copy files and set their permission modes and, if possible,
their owner and group. Used similarly to `cp'; typically
used in Makefiles to copy programs into their destination
directories. It can also be used to create the destination
directories and any leading directories, and to set the final
directory's modes. It refuses to copy files onto themselves.
Options:
-g, --group=GROUP
Set the group ownership of the installed file or directory
to the group ID of GROUP (default is process's current
group). GROUP may also be a numeric group ID.
-m, --mode=MODE
Set the permission mode for the installed file or directory
to MODE, which is an octal number (default is u=rwx,g=rx,o=rx).
-o, --owner=OWNER
If run as root, set the ownership of the installed file to
the user ID of OWNER (default is root). OWNER may also be
a numeric user ID.
-c No effect. For compatibility with old Unix versions of install.
-s, --strip
Strip the symbol tables from installed files.
-p, --preserve-timestamps
Retain creation and modification timestamps when installing files.
-d, --directory
Create a directory and its leading directories, if they
do not already exist. Set the owner, group and mode
as given on the command line. Any leading directories
that are created are also given those attributes.
This is different from the SunOS 4.0 install, which gives
directories that it creates the default attributes.
-D
Like the -d option, but a file is installed, along with the directory.
Useful when installing into a new directory, and the install
process doesn't properly comprehend making directories.
David MacKenzie <djm@gnu.ai.mit.edu> */
/* Written by David MacKenzie <djm@gnu.ai.mit.edu> */
#ifdef _AIX
#pragma alloca