1. Enlightenment, not X-Enlihgtenment for the desktop. we're a proper DE name
2. Have a fixed desktop env list and efreet gives very... odd results
(eg X-Geequie because some rogue desktop file decides it's good to
have this in it :)).
this is the correct way to write a build system. one toplevel Makefile.am with the rest of the directories having include Makefile.mk files.
additional authors:
Iván Briano <ivan.briano@intel.com>
this adds moldova (moldavian?) flag for layouts of keyboards and
refreshes some of the generic images for unknown, latin america, brail
and arabic "flag" images, and forces flag icons to be 2:1 aspect
ration with icon centered within that area to address T647
1. clear out environment as best is possible before executing
anything. especially PATH and IFS are set to minimal base defaults.
also use clearenv() if available and unsetenv()
2. remove gdb method as it's just too dangerous. run it as normal as
the user and if the kernel / distro dny that - then sorry. too bad.
now e only uses elementary's theme. this is to stop the bitrot and
forking of e's theme vs the unified elm theme that has everything for
e in it already. this obviously makes elm a requirement of e18 on, and
this also notes that emotion is always in efl these days, so its no
longer an option, and ecore-imf is no longer used as edje does the
entires now itself. in future it'll all be elm.
this is a major unification point for themes for elm and e. this will
need some testing, but everything seems to work day-to-day, but theme
selector is untested.
this also removes the theme selector for splash as that is now simply
unified with the same theme as everything else.
If one have systemd but installs to ~/ (no root) then installing
e18.service hurts.
Have e18.service to be generated using @prefix@ so it won't hardcode
to /usr/bin, removing "-locked" as that can be configured in the GUI
and in some cases you just want your e18 without lock/password.
NB: This is so that the indicator mouse events can be disabled, thus
not allowing Silly people to turn off their Only single monitor.
Signed-off-by: Chris Michael <cp.michael@samsung.com>
I'm sure some of you have seen the warnings generated by libpng 1.6:
"known incorrect sRGB profile". Now, this is no big deal, it's just a
warning, but I still wanted to look into it further. By my count,
there are 800 png files in Enlightenment, of which only 6 have
embedded iCC profiles, all from HP. The rest are sRGB colorspace, but
do not include a profile. There are some good arguments for this
(http://imageoptim.com/color-profiles.htmlhttp://www.gballard.net/psd/save_for_web_embed_ICC_profile.html)
and since this seems to be the default, I've attached the 6 files with
the profiles stripped out. As you can see, it doesn't change the image
or the colorspace, it just leaves the calibration up to the end user's
system.
I haven't been able to find just what's wrong with the HP iCC profile
being used that the authors of libpng don't like, but it makes sense
to standardize the way profiles are handled anyway. And it has the
nice side effect of silencing warnings, even if the Debian/Ubuntu
users aren't likely to see them for a couple of years.
I can just change the iCC profile instead if you would prefer. I've
seen multiple people recommend the Argyll sRGB profile, which is still
"sRGB IEC61966-2.1" and is public domain.