slackbuilds_ponce/office/openoffice.org
2010-05-11 15:03:04 +02:00
..
desktop-file-fix-2.2.diff office/openoffice.org: Initial import 2010-05-11 15:03:04 +02:00
doinst.sh office/openoffice.org: Initial import 2010-05-11 15:03:04 +02:00
openoffice.org.info office/openoffice.org: Initial import 2010-05-11 15:03:04 +02:00
openoffice.org.SlackBuild office/openoffice.org: Initial import 2010-05-11 15:03:04 +02:00
README office/openoffice.org: Initial import 2010-05-11 15:03:04 +02:00
slack-desc office/openoffice.org: Initial import 2010-05-11 15:03:04 +02:00

OpenOffice.org is a full-featured open-source office suite that is compatible 
with all other major office software.

This script builds a Slackware package from the official binary (RPM's) 
distributed by openoffice.org.  Everything needed by the application should 
be built statically into it, so there aren't any dependencies not satisfied 
by a normal installation.  A java runtime environment (jre) is suggested by 
openoffice.org, but it is not required.

Please don't file bug reports relating to the fact that the resulting package 
doesn't open MS Office files by default.  Default applications to open specific 
file types is a per-user setting, and and installing some application should 
not change it.  See these two links for more info: 
  http://freedesktop.org/wiki/Standards_2fshared_2dmime_2dinfo_2dspec
  http://freedesktop.org/wiki/Standards_2fmime_2dactions_2dspec

Please don't file reports about us not using the the 'slackware-menus' package
included in the desktop-integration/ directory.  We don't use that package for
the following reasons:
  1. The package installs to /opt/openoffice.org2.2, but then a symlink is 
     created in /etc to that same directory (/etc/openoffice.org2.2).
     This is not expected behavior from Slackware packages - we don't typically
     put binary files in /etc, and we certainly don't have entire software 
     packages installed there - that will wreak havoc on anyone who does a 
     regular backup of the entire /etc directory.
  2. It installs the icons to /opt/kde/share/icons instead of /usr/share/icons.
     This is fine if you're running kde, but for those people who use gnome,
     it's not.  There's no good reason not to put them in /usr/share/icons or
     /usr/share/pixmaps.
  3. The only other thing the 'slackware-menus' package does is set up the 
     symlinks for the *.desktop files in /usr/share/applications, and it's done
     with them linked from /etc/openoffice.org2.2...  Since we don't want the
     link to /etc at all, this is useless to us.  

Be sure to look at the script for some optional things you can do when building 
(disable the Java loader and add the Optimization Solver).