Removed the unneeded UI versions of Noto. According to the FAQ [1], those
"have tighter vertical metrics, and some glyphs that would be clipped are
redrawn to fit within the constrained space", which doesn't seem necessary
for Haiku. Could be re-added, of course, if it turns out otherwise...
Added Noto CJK fonts. All of them contain the glyphs for jp, kr, sc, tc.
Only differ in their default language.
EFI boot needs -fpic but all boot code was built with -fno-pic.
This is now set accordingly in HAIKU_BOOT_CCFLAGS and
HAIKU_BOOT_C++FLAGS.
Also setup compile flags for EFI platform.
* Only set HAIKU_BOOT_PLATFORM to bios_ia32 if not defined
* Add gnuefi build feature
* Introduce BOOT_LDFLAGS, and move options for passing to linker
into ArchitectureSetup
* x86_64 compile fixes for warnings in boot loader
* loader/elf.cpp: don't include ELF32 support when targeting EFI
* relocation_func.cpp: copy of the relocation code from gnuefi
to make _relocate extern "C", and avoid including <efilib.h>
* boot_loader_efi.ld: copy of gnuefi's elf_x86_64_efi.lds,
modified to include support for C++ constructors, etc. Keep in
sync with the gnuefi package
Signed-off-by: Jessica Hamilton <jessica.l.hamilton@gmail.com>
Install this font to see all those icons WebPositive currently
fails to display e.g. at the discussion forum at
https://discuss.haiku-os.org
Thanks PulkoMandy for pointing this out!
TimeTracker lets you create tasks for your various projects and
shows them in a list. Via double-click on an entry you start/stop the timer
on that task, thus helping you keep track of how much time you spend doing
what.
A few weeks back, I spotted in the Musl FAQ that they apparently ship
empty libm.a and libpthread.a files (https://www.musl-libc.org/faq.html),
which they said was for POSIX compatibility. A bit of digging got me to
http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/c99.html which
says:
> It is unspecified whether the libraries libc.a, libl.a, libm.a, libpthread.a,
> librt.a, [OB] [Option Start] libtrace.a, [Option End] libxnet.a, or liby.a
> exist as regular files. The implementation may accept as -l option-arguments
> names of objects that do not exist as regular files.
So to follow the letter of the law, we only need to have the "c99" command
accept these; however, it appears all Linux and BSD cstdlibs accept them
no matter what compliance mode is in effect.
Discussed with PulkoMandy. This will make HaikuPorts' job a lot easier...
The boot still crashes some time later, but at least it is easier to
test now.
- PackageFS included in the net boot archive
- Tell the system it is booted "from image" when netbooting