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8d25718f1e
Happy Thanksgiving to everyone celebrating, and happy Thursday to everyone else. I've been looking at this new fontconfig (and have run into some of the terrible looking pages I remembered from previous attempts to upgrade). The solution is certainly *not* to disable bitmap fonts. I need those in my terminal emulator, and have never seen a vector font that looks correct. What I've done this time is make the defaults for fontconfig sane and user configurable, and then converted the two bitmap fonts that are causing the problems to OTB format and changing the family name from "name" to "name (OTB)" which prevents them from being picked up by default. Hope this looks better! Cheers! :-) a/file-5.46-x86_64-1.txz: Upgraded. a/mkinitrd-1.4.11-x86_64-52.txz: Rebuilt. geninitrd: since we're sourcing /etc/default/geninitrd, we might as well test the AUTO_REMOVE_ORPHANED_INITRDS variable directly instead of grepping for it in the defaults file. Thanks to Mechanikx. a/pkgtools-15.1-noarch-18.txz: Rebuilt. make-kernel-backup: account for "file" changing 80386 to i386. l/libqalculate-5.4.0.1-x86_64-1.txz: Upgraded. l/openal-soft-1.24.1-x86_64-1.txz: Upgraded. l/pipewire-1.2.7-x86_64-1.txz: Upgraded. x/font-adobe-100dpi-1.0.4-noarch-2.txz: Rebuilt. Install these fonts as OTB rather than PCF. x/font-adobe-75dpi-1.0.4-noarch-2.txz: Rebuilt. Install these fonts as OTB rather than PCF. x/fontconfig-2.15.0-x86_64-3.txz: Rebuilt. Let's not link any hinting, subpixel, or lcdfilter conf files by default. That way the user can choose what to link (if anything) without future fontconfig updates stomping on those choices. x/mesa-24.2.8-x86_64-1.txz: Upgraded. |
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make_world.sh | ||
README.TXT |
This is the source used for Slackware. To look for a particular bit of source (let's say for 'cp'), first you would look for the full path: fuzzy:~# which cp /bin/cp Then, you grep for the package it came from. Note that the leading '/' is removed, and ^ and $ mark the beginning and end of the pattern to match: fuzzy:~# grep ^bin/cp$ /var/lib/pkgtools/packages/* /var/lib/pkgtools/packages/coreutils-9.0-x86_64-3:bin/cp From this, you can see that 'cp' came from the coreutils-9.0-x86_64-3 package. The source will be found in a corresponding subdirectory. In this case, that would be ./a/coreutils/. All of these packages have scripts that extract, patch, and compile the source automatically. These are the 'SlackBuild' scripts. Have fun! --- Patrick J. Volkerding volkerdi@slackware.com