ae2ff0472a
Signed-off-by: Yves-Alexis Perez <corsac@debian.org> |
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config | ||
patches | ||
source | ||
changelog | ||
clean | ||
compat | ||
control | ||
copyright | ||
midori.1 | ||
midori.docs | ||
midori.install | ||
midori.manpages | ||
midori.menu | ||
midori.postinst.base | ||
midori.postrm | ||
midori.preinst | ||
midori.prerm | ||
presubj.in | ||
README.Debian | ||
README.source | ||
rules | ||
runner-append | ||
TODO | ||
watch |
I'm using the following to roll local snapshot releases. To make the initial checkout: git clone git://git.xfce.org/kalikiana/midori midori && apt-get source midori && cd midori && zcat ../midori*.diff.gz | patch -p1 To update and roll a .deb: debuild clean && git pull && v=$(git describe --tags) && v=${v%-*} && v=${v//-/+} && dch -v $v-1 'New upstream snapshot.' && tar --exclude .git --exclude debian -lzma -cf ../${PWD##*/}_$v.orig.tar.lzma -C .. ${PWD##*/} && mkdir -p debian/source && echo '3.0 (quilt)' >debian/source/format && pdebuild Midori has a large number of optional dependencies; I have made some of them build dependencies based on what I think is widely useful. The easiest way to build your own custom binary without such support is to move the appropriate entries from Build-Depends to Build-Conflicts in debian/control. - gtk-doc-tools: API documentation. - python-docutils: HTML user documentation (from plain text). - intltool: localized UI text (menu titles and such). - libunique-dev: turns midori into a client/server arrangement, where subsequent calls will open windows in the first midori. - libsoup2.4-dev: view source code and favicons and "save as". - libsqlite3-dev: persistent history. Without this, browsing history is lost when you quit midori. Possibly also relevant for bookmarks, I'm not sure. Compiles OK with libsqlite0-dev, but history isn't persistent. - librsvg2-bin: create PNG icons from SVG source at compile time. This avoids needing to rasterize the SVGs on the fly each time midori is run. - libidn11-dev: internationalized domain names. - libhildon-1-dev: an alternative to GTK2, for embedded systems. -- Trent W. Buck <trentbuck@gmail.com>, Sat, 21 Mar 2009 19:20:33 +1100