efl/legacy/eet
Carsten Haitzler 7adf4ed4bd asparagus time...
SVN revision: 23679
2006-07-03 04:08:47 +00:00
..
debian The section of a library's -dev package is generally libdevel 2006-04-14 00:24:37 +00:00
doc Portability good. vapier bad. 2005-09-30 04:05:43 +00:00
m4 touchup help output 2005-10-29 02:43:40 +00:00
src clear cache on shutdown 2006-06-22 19:22:26 +00:00
.cvsignore Silence 2005-09-28 03:47:00 +00:00
AUTHORS cedric's mmap patch 2006-06-13 10:20:22 +00:00
COPYING add COPYING 2002-12-05 01:33:51 +00:00
COPYING-PLAIN add COPYING 2002-12-05 01:33:51 +00:00
ChangeLog move eet to HEAD 2002-12-02 23:39:26 +00:00
Doxyfile updated Doxyfiles 2004-10-22 19:12:14 +00:00
INSTALL move eet to HEAD 2002-12-02 23:39:26 +00:00
Makefile.am remove openembedde pkg info - old and dead 2006-06-28 07:20:18 +00:00
NEWS move eet to HEAD 2002-12-02 23:39:26 +00:00
README.in typo 2005-03-03 05:25:31 +00:00
autogen.sh add error checking to all autogen scripts 2005-08-03 01:00:21 +00:00
configure.in asparagus time... 2006-07-03 04:08:47 +00:00
eet-config.in fix blah-config includes 2006-06-11 22:37:25 +00:00
eet.c.in installation of the doc with the autofoo. gendoc is not used anymore. The documentation is built and installed only if doxygen exists. If it's good, I'll commit the same stuff for the other packages 2005-09-27 22:10:09 +00:00
eet.pc.in version uppie... 2004-04-15 07:58:38 +00:00
eet.spec.in Wed May 24 21:58:38 2006 Michael Jennings (mej) 2006-05-25 01:57:12 +00:00
gendoc change gendoc 2004-02-20 08:23:17 +00:00

README.in

Eet @VERSION@

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
(as root unless youa re 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)

DEB: To build deb packages:

  tar zvf @PACKAGE@-@VERSION@.tar.gz
  cd @PACKAGE@-@VERSION@
  dpkg-buildpackage -us -uc -rfakeroot
  cd ..
  rm -rf @PACKAGE@-@VERSION@

You will find all the debian source, binary etc. packages put in the directory
where you first untarred the source tarball.