On Thu, 2022-09-29 at 16:48 +0100, Neil McGovern wrote:
> I've gone through every mailing list that we host, and broadly split
> them into two categories - lists that can be closed and ones that
> should be migrated to discourse.
I think you can close rust-l...@gnome.org. It only gets spam these
On Fri, 2018-06-15 at 00:00 +, Release Team wrote:
> For more information about 3.29, the full schedule, the official
> module lists and the proposed module lists, please see our colorful
> 3.29
> page:
This:
http://ftp.gnome.org/pub/GNOME/teams/releng/3.29.2/versions
has librsvg 2.40.20,
On Tue, 2018-01-16 at 18:01 +0100, Daniel García Moreno wrote:
> Currently we've the stable 0.5.3 in master and the API break changes
> in
> a new branch called next. I want to move all development to master
> and
> keep tags for stable versions, but I don't know if that movement will
> break
On Tue, 2018-01-09 at 11:03 +0100, Emilio Pozuelo Monfort wrote:
>
> That's an option, but instead I've been pushing to get the rustc
> ports for
> official Debian architectures fixed for some time already,
>
Thanks for working on this! I hope it's something that just takes some
time to get
Dear everyone,
Librsvg 2.42.0 is out today, and the 2.42.x series is the new stable
one. When I have unstable stuff to commit I'll put it in a 2.43
series.
Please use 2.42.x for GNOME 3.28 if possible. Thanks!
Federico
___
desktop-devel-list
On Sat, 2017-12-16 at 14:48 +0100, Michael Biebl wrote:
[dropping distributor-list from the thread]
> We'd love to switch in Debian, but
>
> https://buildd.debian.org/status/package.php?p=rustc=unstable
>
> is effectively preventing us from doing that.
> Looks like Firefox 57 is not coming to
Hello,
I have just released librsvg-2.40.20. This is the last release that I
will make in the 2.40.x series - the C-only version.
This release is to avoid having unreleased commits in the 2.40 branch.
It also has a security fix.
People are *STRONGLY* encouraged to switch to 2.41.x as soon as
On Sat, 2017-10-14 at 22:08 +0200, Uwe Scholz wrote:
> Now after I thought about it I was wondering how a user can be sure
> that he gets the same source code which I uploaded to the Gnome
> servers. The thing is, when I do a release with "make distcheck" as
> described in the gnome wiki(*), a
On Sat, 2017-12-02 at 13:51 -0500, David Michael wrote:
>
> In librsvg's COMPILING.md, there are two inconsistencies around
> cross-compiling.
>
> * The option --target=TRIPLE is passed to cargo, not --host.
> * RUST_TARGET_PATH should be set for make, not configure.
Ah, thanks for
Hi, everyone,
I have just released librsvg 2.40.19. This is the version without Rust
code. This has some new bugfixes, and some backported fixes from the
development branch.
You can get librsvg 2.40.19 here:
https://download.gnome.org/sources/librsvg/2.40/
SHA256 checksums:
I have just relased librsvg 2.41.1. This is a big release! It is
still in the experimental 2.41.x series, in which librsvg is being
rewritten in Rust bit by bit, while keeping the C API/ABI intact.
Librsvg 2.41.1 is available here:
https://download.gnome.org/sources/librsvg/2.41/
SHA256
I've just released librsvg 2.40.18. This is the stable series without
Rust code; it's only shaky C code for your perusal.
You can download librsvg-2.40.18 here:
https://download.gnome.org/sources/librsvg/2.40/
Checksums:
b9a02bebc721b0198ac68fdc251898b5b62bd0d5b18611a1da77b1e076253eef
I've just released librsvg 2.40.17. This is *NOT* the Rust series;
this is the traditional C-only library.
This version has a fix for gnome-desktop-thumbnailer for GNOME 3.24,
courtesy of Jeremy Bicha.
Librsvg 2.40.17 is available here:
https://download.gnome.org/sources/librsvg/2.40/
On Fri, 2017-01-13 at 08:37 +, Alberto Fanjul Alonso wrote:
>
> Do anybody though about trying new services for communication?
>
> - signal https://whispersystems.org/
> - telegram https://telegram.org/
> - matrix.org http://matrix.org/
> - gitter https://gitter.im/
Just to add to the
On Thu, 2017-01-12 at 11:37 -0800, Christian Hergert wrote:
>
> Even the g_once magic is not enough because they would have separate
> data sections for the static cached type id. So the get_type() for
> the
> failed registration would have G_TYPE_INVALID.
>
Oh oh oh, we were talking about
On Wed, 2017-01-11 at 18:18 -0800, Christian Hergert wrote:
>
> Not sure, its a runtime error you would see when a downstream would
> try
> to register an already registered GType.
How does one get this to happen?
Is it only a problem if two threads race to pass the same type_name to
On Mon, 2017-01-09 at 13:11 -0800, Christian Hergert wrote:
>
> Does a static link of gtk-rs in librsvg prevent others from using
> gtk-rs
> in consuming applications because any GType (glue code!) has been
> registered which will conflict with an applications use of gtk-rs.
How would you write
On Fri, 2017-01-06 at 05:25 +0200, Adrian Perez de Castro wrote:
> them, and unpack them in the proper location. Then "cargo build"
> doesn't need
> to fetch things itself. For more on this, there's interesting
> comments here:
>
> https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/issues/1330
>
This is very
On Thu, 2017-01-05 at 20:21 +0100, Michael Biebl wrote:
>
> It has been mentioned on #debian-devel that rustc is really only
> supported on i386 and amd64 (as a so-called tier1 architecture).
> https://buildd.debian.org/status/package.php?p=rustc=sid looks
> pretty sad.
>
> Just curious if you
On Thu, 2017-01-05 at 11:37 -0600, Michael Catanzaro wrote:
>
> Hm, I'm excited for Rust, but I think we probably do not want GNOME
> to
> depend on an alternative package manager like cargo, right? At least
> that would require some serious discussion here first.
Librsvg still uses autotools;
Librsvg 2.41.0 is just released!
This is the first version to have Rust code in it. The public API
remains unchanged. Apologies in advance to distros who will have to
adjust their build systems for Rust - it's like taking a one-time
vaccine; you'll be better off in the end for it.
Librsvg
On Wed, 2016-05-11 at 13:08 +0100, David Woodhouse wrote:
> Tyagi is working on a GSoC project this year, implementing a
> certificate chooser which will probably live in the GCR library.
I would love to have exactly this thing available for use, for example,
from gtk-vnc and vinagre.
Right now
I've just released librsvg version 2.40.15.
"Wait, did I miss a 2.40.14 with all the hot stuff?", you may say.
Not so, I'll reassure you. I just made a mistake and tagged the git
repository for 2.40.14 before updating the NEWS file (duh!). Of course
I discovered this after pushing the tag to
Dear lovers of arrowheads pointing in the right direction,
I've just released librsvg version 2.40.13. Librsvg is a library to
render SVG files into raster images.
In this release we got a lot of help from Menner, a Wikimedian who has
been tracking down SVG images from Wikimedia Commons that
Dear lovers of warm puppies,
I've just released librsvg version 2.40.12. Librsvg is a library to
render SVG files into raster images. Just like puppies eat dog food and
turn it into poop, librsvg eats SVGs (even compressed ones!) and turns
them into pixels via an intricate yet exquisite system
Dear lovers of Windows,
(Yes, really!)
I've just released librsvg version 2.40.11. Librsvg is a library to
render SVG pictures into millions of colorful pixels, i.e. an SVG
rendering library. You know how an unicorn eats grass and excretes
colored rainbows? Librsvg is like that unicorn, if
Dear lovers of non-leaky libraries,
Here is a release 2.40.10 of librsvg, the world's only artisanal and
locally-sourced RSVG rendering library.
This is a bugfix release, wherein my Gaussian-blurring code, which had
some important memory leaks, is now fixed courtesy of the ever-amazing
Carlos
Dear lovers of blurry vectors,
This is a new release of librsvg, 2.40.9, everyone's favorite SVG
rendering library made entirely of FREE/LIBRE AND OPEN SOURCE BITS.
This is a bugfix release, but what bugfixes!
- Fixed bgo#738367 - V/v/H/h commands in path elements were not
working. Patch by
Dear lovers of fast vectors,
Here is a new release of librsvg, everyone's favorite SVG rendering
library. There is a fuzz-testing bugfix in this release, and a few
minor optimizations.
I removed a libart-ism which I then had to revert, because it caused
incorrect rendering (see bug #745177).
On Mon, 2015-02-16 at 09:03 -0800, Jasper St. Pierre wrote:
Are you going to be doing active development on librsvg, or just do
security fixes? Are you going to fix the broken SVG rendering and make
it fast?
First I want to take care of the bugs exposed via fuzz testing. Most of
those are
On Mon, 2015-02-09 at 12:53 +, Emmanuele Bassi wrote:
I do agree with Philip's proposal of warning if the sync API is called
inside the default main context, even if there's the obvious issue of
console-only code that still uses a main loop, but does not have
interactivity issues.
Dear everyone,
I'm happy to announce that we now have a safety-l...@gnome.org mailing
list. This is for discussions around safety, privacy, and security.
This is some introductory material which you may have already read:
http://mjg59.dreamwidth.org/32686.html
Hi, all,
This mail is intended for brainstorming some ideas before GUADEC. It's
not to decide anything and set it in stone.
I've been preparing my GUADEC talk about crypto infrastructure for
newbies, and I've started to realize that it may be useful for gnome.org
to have an official,
On Thu, 2014-02-13 at 20:52 -0500, Matthias Clasen wrote:
great that you are looking into this !
See https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=704387 for previous
thoughts on this.
Excellent, thanks! There's a lot of good info there. I've posted some
questions - should we continue the
Dear lovers of exotic hardware,
There are now laptops with two GPUs, and RANDR 1.4 supports configuring
them in multiple ways. I'll quote from the RANDR specification:
Version 1.4 adds a new object called a provider object. A provider object
represents a GPU or virtual device providing
On Fri, 2013-08-16 at 19:09 -0400, Richard Stallman wrote:
Hosting services in general are not SaaSS. Maybe some specific thing
about GitHub is SaaSS; if so, can you explain the details?
Please take discussions of GitHub off-list. The Foundation Board will
discuss the GNOME mirror during its
On Thu, 2013-08-15 at 11:03 +0200, Alberto Ruiz wrote:
I've been working with the GitHub guys and Andrea Veri on setting up a
mirror for all GNOME repos in GitHub.
This is great news! It should make it easier for people to keep
independent/experimental branches of Gnome modules and have a
On Sun, 2013-07-07 at 23:26 -0400, Jasper St. Pierre wrote:
Where a bug is doesn't matter: all GNOME Shell hackers work on mutter
and vice versa. Mutter exists just so we can reuse metacity's solid WM
core, rather than reinventing it. If there's bugs that you feel are
getting attention, I'll
On Sun, 2013-07-07 at 14:10 +0200, bugs wrote:
What is about multi-monitor-setups?
If an application with an Application-Menu is moved to a
non-primary-screen, the Application-Menu is only accessible on the
primary-screen.
This is https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=695377 by the way.
On Fri, 2013-07-05 at 22:04 +0100, David Woodhouse wrote:
Focus-follows-mouse makes it worse (especially when it's a trackpad, and
a large screen, and a small application like empathy which happens to be
on the *other* side of the screen for where its bizarrely detached menu
now lives.
I
On Sun, 2013-06-16 at 12:24 +0200, Sébastien Wilmet wrote:
On Sun, Jun 16, 2013 at 11:33:53AM +0200, Stefan Sauer wrote:
once upon a time we had
http://developer.gnome.org/doc/guides/programming-guidelines/book1.html;.
We link to that from the gstreamer manual as a recommended reading. Can
On Fri, 2013-04-26 at 12:01 +0200, Andrea Veri wrote:
from today the Services bot will be able to manage / log meetings by
using the MeetBot plugin.
This is pretty awesome. Thanks for setting up nice services like these!
Federico
___
On Tue, 2013-04-23 at 17:21 +0800, jiangpengfei wrote:
I have a doubt about the use of gvariant.
In the source file:
glib-2.34.3/gio/tests/gdbus-test-codegen.c:860,
foo_igen_bar_call_test_primitive_types_sync uses a address of
ret_val_bytestring, which is a local variable
On Mon, 2013-04-22 at 14:36 +0100, Allan Day wrote:
The main element of the design is to combine the sound, network,
bluetooth, power and user menus into a single menu.
The update proposal [1] lists the following items as problems, but it
doesn't say *why* they are problems. I'll comment:
*
On Sat, 2013-04-13 at 00:33 +0200, Lanoxx wrote:
{\
0x2e2e, 0x3434, 0x3636,\
0x, 0x, 0x,\
0x4e4e, 0x9a9a, 0x0606,\
Would this be acceptable?
#define C(x) ((x) / 65535.0)
{
C(0x2e2e), C(0x3434), C(0x3636),
C(0x), C(0x), C(0x),
On Sun, 2013-04-07 at 10:19 -0700, Dylan McCall wrote:
Is somebody working on Content Selection at this point, and do you
think it would make sense for a student to contribute to that as a
GSoC project? (Willing mentors, etc?). Who should I talk to? Any help
is greatly appreciated.
As far as
On Fri, 2013-04-05 at 01:23 +0800, Ma Xiaojun wrote:
If you can trust me, I had fun with writing a Python 3.2 extension
recently (using plain C/API), this is not open sourced yet.
I know some basic Git, honestly need to learn branching stuff though.
My vision:
Currently I'm only
On Wed, 2012-12-12 at 23:19 -0500, Karen Sandler wrote:
The marketing team agreed that this time a privacy/security campaign would
be great for a friends of GNOME drive. After Jacob Applebaum's talk at
GUADEC, we heard a lot of people discussing how important these issues are
and how we'd
On Mon, 2012-12-10 at 17:28 +, Philip Withnall wrote:
Are there any reasons against putting UTF-8 characters in the source
code (which weren’t covered in my blog post)?
You can put UTF-8 in the source code, and GCC understands it just fine.
Hi, everyone,
This is not terribly relevant to Gnome 3, but anyway.
Nelson Marques and Stefano Karapetsas, both from the MATE desktop
project, asked to maintain gnome-main-menu. Since we don't use
gnome-main-menu in official Gnome, I've decided to pass on
maintainership to them.
Both Nelson
On Thu, 2012-11-15 at 16:27 +0200, Peteris Krisjanis wrote:
I need one thing to clarify - In Gtk+ 2.x, when GtkScrolledWindow had
policy for one of scroll bars set to GTK_POLICY_NEVER, window just
dropped that scroll bar, but didn't do anything else. I have application
to port which does it,
On Tue, 2012-11-06 at 14:52 +0100, Pierre-Yves Luyten wrote:
I was quickly looking at gnome platform overview on
http://developer.gnome.org/
or dedicated http://developer.gnome.org/platform-overview/stable/
or http://developer.gnome.org/platform-overview/unstable/
No
On Sun, 2012-10-28 at 08:53 +, Richard Hughes wrote:
I was wondering if we could do something using GtkApplication. It
seems a shame to reimplement this in every app when most apps have
just one window...
Even easier and general-purpose:
gtk_window_set_state_saving_key (window, char
On Wed, 2012-10-24 at 16:38 -0500, Jason Simanek wrote:
What if the window manager's API (pardon my lack of proper
terminology) gave applications tools for identifying a primary window?
For that matter, giving them a way to identify all of their windows.
This mechanism exists; it is the
On Wed, 2012-10-24 at 08:28 -0500, Jason Simanek wrote:
I would think simply preserving the specific absolute position of the
windows of the various applications a user regularly employs would be
much easier than calculating a dynamic position on the fly every time a
new application is
On Wed, 2012-09-05 at 14:56 -0400, Colin Walters wrote:
The upside though is that jhbuild sysdeps --install now does a LOT
more.
For future jhbuild updates we'll try to either add a moduleset version
field that makes this error more obvious, or even better - teach jhbuild
how to
On Thu, 2012-08-09 at 22:57 -0700, Maciej Piechotka wrote:
1. Are there/will there be a videos from GUADEC?
Yes, hopefully. The GUADEC team is working on this; I definitely saw
video cameras running in all the sessions.
2. While I understand that mobile is new 'shiny' so far I am sceptical
On Sat, 2012-06-30 at 16:20 -0007, Adam Dingle wrote:
The features in core GNOME apps are the result of years of hard work
and consensus building by our community. All I ask is to be informed
before these features vanish and to be given the chance to say why I
like them so much.
The
On Mon, 2012-07-02 at 16:03 +0100, Allan Day wrote:
Federico Mena Quintero feder...@gnome.org wrote:
...
The anti-pattern for both removals is like, there's some peeling paint
in this house - let's bulldoze the neighborhood.
...
How do you know that was the reason for the decision
On Thu, 2012-05-10 at 02:47 +, Debarshi Ray wrote:
So from Shotwell's point of view, would it make sense to replace its
existing SQLite store and UI? Would it not be as good as writing from
scratch?
Shotwell's database is presumably optimized for what Shotwell needs to
do. Tracker, as a
On Tue, 2012-04-24 at 09:28 +0200, Tomasz Torcz wrote:
Totem already does that - in preferences, it's the first option on first
tab - Start playing files from last position.
You, sir, are a life-saver. Thank you!
Federico
___
On Tue, 2012-04-24 at 09:29 +0100, Bastien Nocera wrote:
On Mon, 2012-04-23 at 21:09 -0500, Federico Mena Quintero wrote:
* Tivo-like pausing. The phone rings and you stop paying attention to
the TV or screen; by the time you hit Pause you've missed some of the
movie's conversation, so
On Fri, 2012-05-04 at 22:58 +0100, Martyn Russell wrote:
The default for tracker these days is:
$HOME (non-recursively, just files in that directory)
XDG locations (Videos, Music, Downloads, etc) all recursively.
Sounds perfect; this would work well for me. Thanks :)
Federico
On Fri, 2012-05-04 at 00:03 -0500, Diego Escalante Urrelo wrote:
A common language of patterns is an awesome idea. I'd encourage
Federico to expand on the subject.
Calum, Allan, and generally the people around the London UX Hackfest
have already done a ton of work in this area:
On Wed, 2012-04-25 at 14:27 +0100, Allan Day wrote:
But there are challenges and things we can do better. Among those
obstacles, I see:
* lack of design resources - we are always trailing behind where we
want to be, and there are important tasks which we are unable to
complete (a new HIG
Why did I write that mail?
First of all, I'm very sorry for doing precisely what I was trying to
prevent - alienating people. I wrote that mail in anger, always a bad
idea. I owe everyone, and especially the design team, an explanation.
In Gnome we are going through a period where there is a
On Wed, 2012-04-25 at 15:31 +0100, Sergey Udaltsov wrote:
no way to find the audience that would be unbiased? Are you just
implying that the current userbase of GNOME is so geekish that fair
survey among existing users would only represent the POV of geeks?
It would be very instructive to see
On Tue, 2012-04-24 at 03:54 -0400, Jasper St. Pierre wrote:
As for the Extension Hook Support, I want to get consensus of a
policy that we won't reject a patch that allows an otherwise
tricky/dirty/impossible hook into the Shell or Mutter for extensions
use, after passing the standard code
The design team IS welcome to:
* Produce designs and propose them to Gnome at large and the relevant
maintainers.
* Produce designs and implement them in experimental branches, which
then are subject to maintainers' approval for merging into the
mainline.
* Advise Gnome developers at
I've been having a terrible time trying to get something tested on top
of Gnome 3.4, all because I can't get 3.4 built from jhbuild. I'm too
old to build from tarballs, and my distro doesn't carry 3.4 yet.
I wonder how people who hack on core Gnome do it on a day to day
basis.
Here are the
On Mon, 2012-03-12 at 14:00 +0100, Vincent Untz wrote:
Pessulus was a configuration lockdown editor for GNOME 2. It never got
ported to GNOME 3, as it more or less involves a complete rewrite (move
to introspection-based bindings and move to GSettings) and nobody found
the motivation to do
On Thu, 2012-03-15 at 12:52 -0400, Colin Walters wrote:
But do you have a global sense of whether we should at this point:
0) Patch affected applications
1) Pursue hacks (or non-hacks?) in GTK+ to improve compatibility
2) Make it opt-in
Are there some rough docs on the new scrolling stuff?
--
Create a text document
Create a spreadsheet
Create a presentation
Owner
=
Federico Mena Quintero
Involved parties
Gnome-shell team
Zeitgeist team
Current status
==
There has been discussion about how to implement jumplists [0
On Tue, 2011-08-30 at 15:24 -0400, Shaun McCance wrote:
I noticed that we have Contacts, Documents, and Sushi in the
apps moduleset.
gnome-documents worries me because of its dependency on Tracker.
As far as I can tell, g-d is linked from
On Mon, 2011-08-01 at 18:35 +0300, Felipe Contreras wrote:
What do you think?
Keep in mind that Gnome 3 just hasn't been around for very long. Right
now Gnome 3 is most likely only being used by technical people, Linux
enthusiasts, etc. - it has not trickled down to end users yet. We may
have
On Tue, 2011-06-07 at 09:56 +0100, Bastien Nocera wrote:
Why? Goobox certainly isn't the type of application we would want using
a dark theme. It's not presenting video, or images, so it shouldn't be
using the dark theme variant.
Do we have a rationale for using dark themes for multimedia
On Fri, 2011-05-20 at 08:02 -0400, Matthias Clasen wrote:
- An 'initial-setup' tool. The goal here is to allow setting up a few
essential things on a new system before you start to use it for the
first time.
Would this be the right place for the give me a legible font thingy?
On Wed, 2011-05-18 at 14:09 +0200, Lennart Poettering wrote:
[setting the hostname and other little interfaces]
In the long run I expect the following additional interfaces used by
GNOME or one of its components:
- I am working on two more mechanisms generalizing control of the system
On Wed, 2011-05-18 at 21:50 +0100, Bastien Nocera wrote:
Which is why I've asked Lennart to add a flag to systemd's configure to
install only the little servicey bits, for Linux distros, and the docs
would serve as basis for implementation of other OSes.
That's fine. I still think other
On Fri, 2011-05-13 at 10:05 +0100, Calum Benson wrote:
As an aside, the terminology that most OS X apps have settled on for
this feature is either Reveal in Finder or Show in Finder, rather
than Open in Finder (Finder being the Mac's file manager). I guess
those verbs make it sound more like
On Wed, 2011-05-11 at 10:36 +0200, Dave Neary wrote:
I really miss this feature (and the related feature I'd like to see of
storing recently used folders as well as recently used files).
Excellent use cases, Dave.
I've just updated http://live.gnome.org/DocumentCentricGnome with
details on
Hi, all,
Per André's request to post features for Gnome 3.2 - here goes.
A while ago I blogged about the problem of lack of circulation in our
files, and posted a patch for Evince:
http://people.gnome.org/~federico/news-2010-08.html#19
In summary, while one can go *down* in the file system
On Tue, 2011-05-10 at 18:10 +0100, Maciej Piechotka wrote:
Hmm. Maybe a better solution would be to somehow drag'n'drop?
Say:
- Attach xyz.pdf to e-mail: open xyz.pdf drag the window/contents of
window to new mail window
- Copy abc.gnumeric to CD - open file in gnumeric,
On Tue, 2011-05-10 at 19:13 +0100, Bastien Nocera wrote:
And applications that can send out files, could also add a little menu
item to send it out using nautilus-sendto (the API there being
nautilus-sendto filename). Evolution, Totem, Rhythmbox and a number of
others allow you to do that.
On Tue, 2011-05-10 at 22:58 +0200, Milan Bouchet-Valat wrote:
Couldn't there be a common menu in the Shell that would work like the
application menu, but for documents? I think it would be a real benefit
to know that in every app you use, you're able to perform common actions
on the opened
On Wed, 2011-04-06 at 10:11 -0400, Shaun McCance wrote:
I was up late last night trying to get all the pieces together
for the Platform Overview.
Sweet; thanks for updating this.
I'm just starting to read projectmallard.org. Do you have something
that one can drop into Emacs's psgml-mode so
On Tue, 2011-04-12 at 12:31 -0400, Shaun McCance wrote:
I don't use psgml-mode, so I don't know what kinds of formats
it can take. I use nxml-mode, which works with RNG compact
syntax files. For that, there's this:
http://projectmallard.org/1.0/mallard-1.0.rnc
Excellent, thanks. I'll try
On Tue, 2011-03-22 at 10:02 -0400, Matthias Clasen wrote:
- 'Finding and reminding' in the shell. There are fairly detailed
writeups about this, and the Zeitgeist team and Federico have been
working on something that at least looks similar.
On Tue, 2011-03-22 at 16:39 +, Bastien Nocera wrote:
This would require somebody writing the Web Accounts panel, which
would integrate Telepathy accounts, libsocialweb accounts, and possibly
Evolution ones too. My attempts at coercing people on working on that
have so far failed for 3.0.
On Fri, 2011-01-28 at 14:19 +0100, Siegfried-Angel Gevatter Pujals
wrote:
Why do you ask, is OpenSUSE using some weird location for schemas? The
path is hardcoded in setup.cfg and DistUtilExtra's i18n module is
taking care of generating and installing the file.
Uh, no, we don't use anything
On Fri, 2011-01-28 at 21:34 +, Sergey Udaltsov wrote:
I am asking the people's opinion about the general
strategy in treating non-linux systems. Or, perhaps, officially
admitting that we do not have a policy here - just decide on
case-by-case basis.
It pretty much has to be done on a
Hi, everyone,
Does anyone know how to make python's distutils install GConf schemas
correctly? Or a module that already does that, so I can copy the
incantations?
[This is for gnome-activity-journal, which uses distutils instead of
autotools, and still uses gconf.]
Thanks,
Federico
On Fri, 2010-04-09 at 18:09 -0400, Owen Taylor wrote:
I've attempted below to extract out some of the technical bits from
http://live.gnome.org/GnomeShell/Design/Whiteboards/FindingAndReminding
This is great stuff. I feel kind of bad commenting from the sidelines,
given that I have done
On Wed, 2009-08-12 at 19:59 +0100, Chris Coulson wrote:
The way that this is currently done in Ubuntu is by patching gnome-panel
and nautilus to signal to xsplash over dbus when they are finished
loading and ready to use. Xsplash will only disappear when both of these
components are ready, or
On Mon, 2009-04-20 at 10:58 -0400, Dan Winship wrote:
So, actually, what exactly IS the use case of ChangeLog if there is git
history on one end and NEWS on the other? Who are the people who need
more information than NEWS gives, but who would not want to actually
check out the source tree,
On Thu, 2009-03-12 at 10:21 +0100, Frederic Crozat wrote:
[Breakpad / Socorro / Crash catcher]
Which is used in latest version of bug-buddy and known to be broken on
build.gnome.org because nobody has time to maintain it :(
At one point bug-buddy generated a stack trace and sent it to b.g.o
Hi,
I just branched these three modules:
gnome-desktop
gnome-settings-daemon
gnome-control-center
For all three, development goes on in trunk, and maintenance goes on in
the gnome-2-24 branch.
Federico
___
On Tue, 2008-09-16 at 11:34 +0200, Stephane Delcroix wrote:
Since 2.23.1, gnome-settings-daemon contains a housekeeping plugin that
clean the .thumbnails. Even if it looks fair, it really makes the F-spot
usage awful to the point it's basically unusable.
A semi-related point:
JPEG loading
It used to be that one could do this to debug an auto-restart program:
1. run gnome-session-remove nautilus,
2. unset SESSION_MANAGER
3. run nautilus under gdb
What's the new way to do that? Nautilus doesn't even appear in the new
gnome-session-properties.
Federico
On Tue, 2008-05-13 at 12:20 -0500, Shaun McCance wrote:
If I have to use the en translation, then I have to put
this string in the source code:
The file %s could not be found.
Then I have to run 'intltool-update en', open en.po,
and add the translation. That's more steps, none of
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