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87 lines
3.6 KiB
Plaintext
87 lines
3.6 KiB
Plaintext
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Packaging suggestions for NetSurf 30 July 2008
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This document lays out some suggestions for people interested in packaging
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NetSurf for UNIX-like OSes.
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We consider the Debian (and thus Ubuntu) packages excellent examples to
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crib from. They do everything right.
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Building NetSurf
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==================
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You should change Makefile.config to be specific (rather than rely on AUTO)
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for the libraries and functionality you want to include. This will help
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your packages be consistent. Also remember that you can turn off
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functionality such as PDF export, RISC OS Sprite support, SVG rendering etc.
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from here should you require a smaller, lighter build.
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Launching NetSurf
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===================
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The GTK port of NetSurf requires access to some resources at run time.
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These are stored in gtk/res/ in the source tree. Some of these files are
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symlinks into the !NetSurf directory, which is the application container
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for the native RISC OS build. None of the other files from the !NetSurf
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directory are required - the symlinks are used only as a way of making
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checkouts smaller and making sure changes to one set of resources updates
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the other.
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The binary that the build system produces is called "nsgtk". There is also
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a shell script called "netsurf" that will set up the environment and launch
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the nsgtk binary. Do not ship this shell script with your package. It is
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included only as a convience for launching NetSurf from the build tree.
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Instead, you should move nsgtk to /usr/bin/netsurf (or wherever your
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distribution's packaging policy suggests) and copy the contents of
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gtk/res/ (dereferencing the symlinks, obviously) to /usr/share/netsurf (or
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wherever your packaging policy suggests).
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You will need to tell NetSurf where to find its resources. NetSurf searches
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three locations by default when trying to load them, in this order:
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1. ~/.netsurf/
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2. $NETSURFRES/
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3. /usr/share/netsurf/
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The second one is how the netsurf launcher script controls it. The third
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location is controlled by the NETSURF_GTK_RESOURCES option in
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Makefile.config, and this is the recommended way for packagers to change
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the location it searches, as this still allows the user some flexibility in
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changing what NetSurf uses.
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User agent string
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===================
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You may also want to change NetSurf's user agent string to include the
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name of your distribution. The user agent string is build by a function
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kept in utils/useragent.c - you'll want to change the macro called
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NETSURF_UA_FORMAT_STRING. It's processed via sprintf, so keep that in
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mind when changing it. The first two printf parameters are major and minor
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version numbers, the second two are OS name (uname -s) and architecture
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(uname -m). You might want change this to something like:
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"NetSurf/%d.%d (%s; %s; Debian GNU/Linux)"
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or similar. Please don't be tempted to mention Mozilla or similar - let's
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let that lie die.
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Home page URL
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===============
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If the user hasn't specified a home page URL in their Preferences, NetSurf
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defaults to a "portal" welcome page at about:netsurf - if you wish to
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change this, you can do so by overriding the NETSURF_HOMEPAGE URL in
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Makefile.config.
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If you make significant changes to NetSurf in your package, please ask your
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users to report bugs to your bug tracker, not ours. We'd also be interested
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in seeing the diffs for these changes - we may be able to integrate them
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to make your job easier in future.
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