- Store openssl flags in own vars
- Share some common flags for plugins
- Fix building plugins on win32
- Store all glib flags in one var
- Don't link against every lib for each plugin
- Don't hardcode ldflags for sysinfo
- Fixes support for large files.
- Fixes filenames not being passed in the filename encoding.
- Drops openssl dependency.
- Code cleanup.
- Fix 'unknown command' warning.
To anybody confused this is not the next stable release, it is just a way to differentiate master
from the 2.10 branch and next stable will be 2.12.0 similar to Gnome's versioning scheme.
- add checks for python3.4
- only warn once for failure to find a version
- only run pkg-config call if the .pc file was actually found
- make unsupported python version non-fatal
Closes#1006Closes#989
- openSUSE has ExtUtils::Embed, EXTERN.h and perl.so in the base perl package.
- Fedora has ExtUtils::Embed in a separate perl-devel package.
- Mageia has ExtUtils::Embed in the base perl package but EXTERN.h in a separate perl-devel package. Without this package, the compiler complains about the missing header.
- Debian has ExtUtils::Embed and EXTERN.h in the base perl package but perl.so in a separate libperl-dev package. Without this package, gcc compiles successfully but complains at link-time about -lperl (ExtUtils::Embed returns '-lperl' in ldopts but it's not actually installed).
configure.ac already requires ExtUtil::Embed to enable perl. To handle the case of Mageia and Debian, this change uses AC_TRY_LINK to verify that the flags returned by ExtUtils::Embed can actually be used to compile before deciding to enable the perl plugin.
Xtext's transparency barely worked on windows, didn't work on any modern
linux wm and used fake transparency.
This uses gtk's built in window opacity that works on more systems and
is real transparency.
Text area only transparency may return with a transition to cairo, if it
works on Windows.