#!/bin/sh # Slackware build script for bless # Written by B. Watson (yalhcru@gmail.com) # Licensed under the WTFPL. See http://www.wtfpl.net/txt/copying/ for details. PRGNAM=bless VERSION=${VERSION:-0.6.0} BUILD=${BUILD:-1} TAG=${TAG:-_SBo} # Compiled .net code is "anycpu" by default. # I see no reason to use lib64 for this. It would mean having separate # 32-bit and 64-bit packages, even though the actual object code is # noarch. Also, no CFLAGS because, no C... since I'm not a mono/C# # expert, I dunno what the equivalent optimization flags should be # (or if they even exist) so we'll go with whatever upstream does. ARCH=noarch CWD=$(pwd) TMP=${TMP:-/tmp/SBo} PKG=$TMP/package-$PRGNAM OUTPUT=${OUTPUT:-/tmp} set -e rm -rf $PKG mkdir -p $TMP $PKG $OUTPUT cd $TMP rm -rf $PRGNAM-$VERSION tar xvf $CWD/${PRGNAM}_$VERSION.orig.tar.gz cd $PRGNAM-$VERSION chown -R root:root . find -L . -perm /111 -a \! -perm 755 -a -exec chmod 755 {} \+ -o \ \! -perm /111 -a \! -perm 644 -a -exec chmod 644 {} \+ # Begin rant. FWIW, I'm not very impressed with bless: # - It has show-stopper bugs that were left in place when the maintainer # abandoned it a few years ago (others have fixed the worst of them # by now, patches included here). # - It starts up in Insert mode which definitely violates the principle # of least surprise (in normal hex editors, overwrite is generally the # default and often only mode). This is so annoying that I patched it. # Even in overwrite mode, it'll let you append bytes to the end of # the file, which a hex editor shouldn't do in its default mode. # - It ships with 3 .layout files that get installed in /usr/share, but # the layout dialog is broken: you can't choose between the # "system" layouts, though you can load them if you copy them to # ~/.config/bless/layouts. (But, they don't appear to *do* anything...) # - Finally, and maybe this is just my own personal bias, I don't see an # obvious way to change the white background to black (if the .layout # files are capable of it, great, but I tried really hard to get them # to work and they don't seem to behave the way the docs say they do). # This means I won't be using this application very much, as it hurts # my eyes to look at it for more than a few minutes. # If it's so awful, why am I writing a SlackBuild for it? Because it's # a GUI hex editor that (a) uses GTK, and (b) doesn't require KDE and # its horde of daemons. Someone is going to be glad it's here. People # who grew up using GUIs are going to prefer this to a textmode app. # Here endeth the rant. # Patch from Debian. Might not be needed with newer versions of mono, # but no harm done. patch -p1 < $CWD/patches/force_gtk_action_namespace.patch # Patch from dead gna.org site: # http://web.archive.org/web/20170205194531/http://gna.org/bugs/?14878 # Fixes "not enough space" error when trying to save. patch -p1 < $CWD/patches/fix_save.patch # Patch from: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/bless/+bug/1622951 # Fixes broken preferences saving. patch -p1 < $CWD/patches/fixxmltextwriter.patch # Make bless act like all other hex editors on the planet by NOT starting # up in Insert mode. I wouldn't have patched this, except that bless # doesn't auto-save the Insert/Overwrite state across sessions. You can # set the default via Edit/Preferences, but it doesn't remember the last # state if you just press Insert to toggle it. patch -p1 < $CWD/patches/default_overwrite.patch # Grr. The configure script doesn't allow setting CS or MCS or CSC or # anything to override the compiler (like normal stuff does with CC). # FFS, it's even hardcoded in C# code... sed -i 's,gmcs,mcs,g' configure builder/ModuleBuilder.cs ./configure \ --without-scrollkeeper \ --prefix=/usr \ --libdir=/usr/lib \ --sysconfdir=/etc \ --localstatedir=/var \ --mandir=/usr/man \ --docdir=/usr/doc/$PRGNAM-$VERSION # GRR. Even with --without-scrollkeeper we have to fake it out. I # could look into using rarian, but I'm not sure what good it would # do: the .xml and .html help files are already installed in the right # places, and help_script.sh knows how to display them when you click # Help/Contents or press F1. cp doc/user/bless-manual.omf.in doc/user/bless-manual.omf make make install DESTDIR=$PKG # --docdir is ignored. mkdir -p $PKG/usr/doc/ mv $PKG/usr/share/doc/$PRGNAM $PKG/usr/doc/$PRGNAM-$VERSION rm -rf $PKG/usr/share/doc # The help script needed help. PKGHELP=$PKG/usr/share/$PRGNAM/help_script.sh sed "s/@VERSION@/$VERSION/g" $CWD/help_script.sh > $PKGHELP chmod 755 $PKGHELP # Man page from Debian. Not much to it, but not much was needed. mkdir -p $PKG/usr/man/man1 gzip -9c < $CWD/$PRGNAM.1 > $PKG/usr/man/man1/$PRGNAM.1.gz cat $CWD/$PRGNAM.SlackBuild > $PKG/usr/doc/$PRGNAM-$VERSION/$PRGNAM.SlackBuild mkdir -p $PKG/install cat $CWD/slack-desc > $PKG/install/slack-desc cat $CWD/doinst.sh > $PKG/install/doinst.sh cd $PKG /sbin/makepkg -l y -c n $OUTPUT/$PRGNAM-$VERSION-$ARCH-$BUILD$TAG.${PKGTYPE:-tgz}