On , Edward Mann wrote:
I would like to be the maintainer for
the Enlightenment e17 for
Fedora. I am sending this e-mail to seek
guidance and also a sponsor. Getting e17 on Fedora i will need to build
and install the following packages
eina - Core data structure
library.
eet - Data encode/decode and storage library.
evas
- Canvas and scenegraph rendering library.
ecore - Core mainloop,
display abstraction and utility library.
embryo - Small Pawn based
virtual machine and compiler.
edje - Abstract GUI layout and
animation object library.
efreet - Standards handling for
freedesktop.org standards.
e_dbus - Dbus wrapping and glue layer
library.
eeze - Device abstraction library.
elementary -
Elementary, the widget set...
emotion - Emotion, video and audio
codec API...
ethumb - EThumb, thumbnail generation library...
eio - Eio, async I/O library...
and finally
Enlightenment
17 - The Window Manager and Desktop Shell.
I also build
Terminology a new terminal emulator based on the efl libraries. I
currently build these on a local vm and have a repository setup on my
website. I tried to use Koji however seeing that the required packages
needed to build e17 are not available i cannot build using Koji, or i
don't know how to do the builds. I would need to work my list down in
the order i have because eet depends on eina. So eina would need to be
build first then it's dev packages installed. Then ecore depends on the
packages listed above it.
On my local machine i wrote a script
that would build a package, install rpm and
dev rpm then move on to the
next package. I am not sure how i would do this with koji.
I look
forward to feedback on this.
Thanks.
I should have added something
about myself. I am married with 2 kids gave the dog to a friend, wife
likes cats. :-D I enjoy scuba diving, not much since the kids, and
Christian apologetics. I have been using Fedora since it first came out
and was running RedHat Linux before that. I work as a software developer
and Unix/Linux administrator. As well as doing VMWare administration. I
do small consultant jobs to keep me exposed to using Linux in different
settings.
Well that should do it.
Thanks.