On Wed, 2008-04-30 at 10:12 -0500, Les Mikesell wrote:
Ruslan Sivak wrote:
Jim Perrin wrote:
On Wed, Apr 30, 2008 at 10:07 AM, Ruslan Sivak russ@vshift.com wrote: Does the entire filesystem need to be case insensitive, or is this a web based product, where you can do some apache rewrite-fu to make this work instead?
It is a web based product, but I'm not sure rewriterules would help. Lets say it's something like this
http://www.domain.com/index.php?action=foo
And inside index.php it does something like
<? include($_GET['page'].".php") ?>
This is a gross simplification, but it's my understanding that if the file was named 'foo.php' and someone typed in
http://www.domain.com/index.php?action=Foo
It would still work on windows, but not on linux because of case sensitivity.
How do the files get there? I'd probably use a brute force approach like lowercasing everything on the way in, or if case needs to be preserved store the real files in one place but build a symlink tree somewhere else of all-lowercase names pointing to the real file, then lowercase the reference and access the name in the symlink directory.
If you absolutely have to do it through the filesystem, I think you could samba-mount a directory (perhaps even shared from the same machine) with the case insensitive option.
Yes samba will give you this option. Then you are looking at a performance hit. "case sensitive = True"