On 14-08-29 07:24 AM, Enrico Tröger wrote:
On 28/08/14 01:49, Matthew Brush wrote:
On 14-08-27 10:54 AM, Enrico Tröger wrote:
Am 24.08.2014 um 17:18 schrieb Matthew Brush:
On 14-08-22 11:23 AM, Enrico Tröger wrote:
Hi,
lately, I started building a new Windows installer which includes a recent GTK 2.24 runtime for Windows which need for future releases.
While most things went fine I noticed one problem:
GTK, in detail Glib, changed the way g_get_user_data_dir() works on Windows: in older releases, something GLib 2.28 or 2.26 and older, g_get_user_data_dir() returned c:\users<username>\AppData\Roaming, in newer GLib versions it returns c:\users<username>\AppData\Local.
This affects users who already have a config directory located in <...>\Roaming and Geany would look in <...>\Local now.
This is the change I'm talking about: https://git.gnome.org/browse/glib/commit/glib/gutils.c?id=9d80c361418f94c609...
How do we want to handle this?
- continue using the <...>\Roaming directory (and so not using
g_get_user_data_dir() anymore)
If we went this route we could use something like the attached patch[0]. Maybe it's what the linked commit is referring to about proper Windows programs probably not using those GLib functions?
leave the code as it is, resulting in a new complete config for users
add some code to check if a config in <...>\Roaming exists and if so,
move it to <...>\Local
I was thinking about it a bit and it might be good to keep using the "Roaming" one (ie. whatever Win32 API gives as correct dir) since IIUC it allows users on a domain to sync their config between machines on login/logout. As mentioned in the linked commit, the function we use (g_get_user_config_dir()) only changed to match g_get_user_data_dir(), not because it's the actually a better or more appropriate directory.
Hmm, ok. We could do it this way either. I have no clue about this roaming stuff, just thought it might be good to follow GLib to be consistent with config dir location. But I don't mind much.
I'd implement this way first, based on your patch, and if we want, we can change to .../Local later anyway if desired.
I think it's probably the easiest solution, with the least code, and most compatibility. If you don't feel like coding it yourself, let me know and I can whip up a (real/working) function to do it. I've been doing a fair bit of Win32 API coding lately so it's fresh on my mind, I
I don't mind, if you like to do it, I'd be happy to test the result :).
I'll try to write it this weekend.
just can't get Waf working with my new setup because Geany's git tree is not on the C: drive anymore (it's on a mapped/shared drive), which makes Waf choke with errors about "no init function" (have you ever experienced this error?).
Nope. I remember on a prevous Windows VM I had Geany and library includes and libs on a C: drive while the system itself (Windows, Python, ...) was installed on a E: drive. That worked well though both were local drives, nothing mapped.
How do you start waf? On my current setup, I added c:\python27 to $PATH, so in the Geany git clone I just type:
python waf configure python waf build python waf install
and everything works fine.
For me, with Python33 in path, it goes like this:
X:>python waf configure No function init defined in X:\wscript
X: is a geany source directory directory on my host machine shared to guest and mapped to X:
I don't remember if I already mentioned that I started to document the Windows build stuff (as promised months ago :D):
https://wiki.geany.org/howtos/win32/build
While not yet complete, the basic stuff should be covered.
Neat, I'll have a read on it this weekend.
BTW, for the 2.24 bump, if you want to update PR# 245[0] as you go, I put some fancy checkboxes to track progress :) Probably I missed some stuff that needs to be done/tested.
Thanks, Matthew Brush