efl/legacy/eet
Vincent Torri c3ec1a38f7 useless semi-colon
SVN revision: 46080
2010-02-11 15:32:29 +00:00
..
debian From: Mikhail Gusarov <dottedmag@dottedmag.net> 2009-08-17 01:31:38 +00:00
doc eet doc looks better now 2009-10-14 19:41:54 +00:00
m4 use efl_fnmatch m4 macro 2010-02-03 20:47:48 +00:00
src useless semi-colon 2010-02-11 15:32:29 +00:00
win32 don't use UNICODE 2009-12-08 05:55:55 +00:00
.cvsignore ignore++ 2008-06-19 12:30:57 +00:00
AUTHORS * eet: Update AUTHORS and ChangeLog accordingly. 2009-09-15 11:23:28 +00:00
COPYING fix the copying license to 2009-01-13 13:00:45 +00:00
COPYING-PLAIN add COPYING 2002-12-05 01:33:51 +00:00
ChangeLog changelog++ 2010-02-04 09:11:09 +00:00
INSTALL minor fix of the doc about tests and coverage 2008-05-16 15:32:32 +00:00
Makefile.am autotools cleanups: 2008-10-26 07:05:11 +00:00
NEWS news has the release in it now. 2008-04-28 04:24:34 +00:00
README.in +E 2008-04-28 04:35:13 +00:00
autogen.sh add error checking to all autogen scripts 2005-08-03 01:00:21 +00:00
configure.ac use efl_fnmatch m4 macro 2010-02-03 20:47:48 +00:00
eet.pc.in use efl_fnmatch m4 macro 2010-02-03 20:47:48 +00:00
eet.spec.in Tue Nov 6 21:42:00 2007 Michael Jennings (mej) 2007-11-07 05:42:08 +00:00

README.in

Eet @VERSION@

Requirements:
-------------
Must:
  libc libm zlib libjpeg
  Windows: evil

******************************************************************************
***
*** FOR ANY ISSUES WITH EET PLEASE EMAIL:
*** enlightenment-devel@lists.sourceforge.net
***
******************************************************************************

Eet is a tiny library designed to write an arbitary set of chunks of
data to a file and optionally compress each chunk (very much like a
zip file) and allow fast random-access reading of the file later
on. It does not do zip as a zip itself has more complexity than is
needed, and it was much simpler to implement this once here.

It also can encode and decode data structures in memory, as well as
image data for saving to eet files or sending across the network to
other machines, or just writing to arbitary files on the system. All
data is encoded in a platform independant way and can be written and
read by any architecture.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
COMPILING AND INSTALLING:

  ./configure
  make
(do this as root unless you are installing in your users directories):
  make install

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
BUILDING PACKAGES:

RPM: To build rpm packages:

  sudo rpm -ta @PACKAGE@-@VERSION@.tar.gz

You will find rpm packages in your system /usr/src/redhat/* dirs (note you may
not need to use sudo or root if you have your own ~/.rpmrc. see rpm documents
for more details)