- -find . -name "*.wrapper" -exec echo $(WHERE_AM_I)/{} \; >> $(BIN_DIST_LIST) 2> /dev/null
- -find $(EXE_DIST_DIR)/setup-config -exec echo $(WHERE_AM_I)/{} \; >> $(BIN_DIST_LIST) 2> /dev/null
- -find $(EXE_DIST_DIR) -perm /a+x -exec echo $(WHERE_AM_I)/{} \; >> $(BIN_DIST_LIST) 2> /dev/null
+ -$(FIND) . -name "*.wrapper" -exec echo $(WHERE_AM_I)/{} \; >> $(BIN_DIST_LIST) 2> /dev/null
+ -$(FIND) $(EXE_DIST_DIR)/setup-config -exec echo $(WHERE_AM_I)/{} \; >> $(BIN_DIST_LIST) 2> /dev/null
+ # We want the executable files, which in theory would be -perm /a+x
+ # ("any execute bit is set") but that doesn't work on some solaris
+ # and OS X machines, so we use -perm -100 instead ("the user execute
+ # bit is set"). In practice, this is extremely unlikely not to be the
+ # same set of files.
+ -$(FIND) $(EXE_DIST_DIR) -type f -perm -100 -exec echo $(WHERE_AM_I)/{} \; >> $(BIN_DIST_LIST) 2> /dev/null
+ # Docs
+ # This gives us both docbook docs, and haddock docs
+ $(FIND) . -name "*.haddock" -exec echo $(WHERE_AM_I)/{} \; >> $(BIN_DIST_LIST) 2> /dev/null
+ $(FIND) . -name "*.html" -exec echo $(WHERE_AM_I)/{} \; >> $(BIN_DIST_LIST) 2> /dev/null
+ $(FIND) . -name "*.css" -exec echo $(WHERE_AM_I)/{} \; >> $(BIN_DIST_LIST) 2> /dev/null
+ $(FIND) . -name "*.gif" -exec echo $(WHERE_AM_I)/{} \; >> $(BIN_DIST_LIST) 2> /dev/null
+ $(FIND) . -name "*.js" -exec echo $(WHERE_AM_I)/{} \; >> $(BIN_DIST_LIST) 2> /dev/null