mirror of
https://review.haiku-os.org/haiku
synced 2025-02-01 11:15:59 +01:00
Axel Dörfler
b8cde4497e
More font work:
* simplified BFont::SetFamily*() server communication - there is now only AS_SET_FAMILY_AND_STYLE left, but at least that one works correctly. * BFont::fFace is now always updated correctly. * Moved the fFace masking to the server - BFont doesn't know enough to do this correctly, anyway. * Only one version of get_font_style() worked correctly. * Font family/style ID and index were used completely mixed up - this would have become an issue as soon as the font list changes during runtime. * Enabled AS_GET_FONT_DIRECTION again - missing functionality should only be taken into account on lowest level as long as it can be emulated. * Made FontServer a bit clearer to use (more to come). * fixed several allocation leaks in the font server communication. * New FontStyle::Direction() method, that currently only returns B_FONT_LEFT_TO_RIGHT, though. * more cleanup. git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@14618 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
Setting Up -------- The build system uses Jam/MR (http://www.perforce.com/jam/jam.html). A BeOS executable of Jam 2.5 is available at: http://haiku-os.org/downloads.php?mode=download&id=10&mirror=0 Unzip the executable and copy it to /boot/home/config/bin. The Jam source code is also included in the source tree. You can as well cd into "src/tools/jam" and run "make" to obtain an executable. To build Haiku you also need Oliver Tappe's GCC 2.95.3. You can get it at BeBits: http://www.bebits.com/app/4011 Older versions of GCC 2.95.3 will likely not work. Configuring -------- Open a Terminal and change to your Haiku trunk folder. To configure the build you can run configure like this: $ ./configure --target=TARGET Where "TARGET" is the target platform for the build. Valid targets are "r5", "bone", "dano" and "haiku". If you omit the target it defaults to "haiku". To configure for ZETA use the "dano" target. The configure script generates a file named "BuildConfig" in the "build" directory. As long as configure is not modified (!), there is no need to call it again. That is for re-building you only need to invoke Jam or makehdimage (see below). If you don't update the source tree very frequently, you may want to execute configure after each update just to be on the safe side. Building -------- The preferred method to build Haiku (currently only possible on a BeOS machine) is this: $ makehdimage /Haiku Where "/Haiku" is the mounted BFS partition where you want to install Haiku on. This can be any BFS partition with enough space available. Use DriveSetup to initialize a partition to BFS. If the parameter is omitted, makehdimage currently creates a 60 MB Haiku image in this directory that you can use for Bochs, Qemu and other emulators to boot. To build the whole source tree for your selected target platform (to use the apps, drivers, add-ons, etc.) you can simply invoke Jam: $ jam Or to build only a specific app/driver/etc. include it as an argument: $ jam Pulse NOTE: If you have checked out the latest SVN revision, it is not unlikely that some parts of the tree won't build. Running ------- Generally there are two ways of running Haiku. On real hardware using a partition and on emulated hardware using an emulator like Bochs. 1. On Real Hardware If you have installed Haiku to it's own partition you can include this partition in your bootmanager and try to boot Haiku like any other OS you have installed. To include a new partition in the BeOS bootmanager run this in a Terminal: $ bootman And follow the steps of the installer. 2. On Emulated Hardware For emulated hardware you should build a "haiku.image" using makehdimage without arguments. How to setup this image depends on your emulater. A tutorial for Bochs on BeOS is below. Bochs ----- Version 2.2 of Bochs for BeOS (BeBochs) can be downloaded from BeBits: http://www.bebits.com/app/3324 The package installs to: /boot/apps/BeBochs2.2 You have to set up a configuration for Bochs. You should edit the ".bochsrc" to include the following: ata0-master: type=disk, path="/path/to/haiku.image", cylinders=122, heads=16, spt=63 boot: disk Now you can start Bochs: $ cd /boot/apps/BeBochs2.2 $ ./bochs Answer with RETURN and with some patience you will see Haiku booting. If booting into the graphical evironment fails you can try to hit "space" at the very beginning of the boot process. The Haiku bootloader should then come up and you can select some safe mode options. Docbook documentation --------------------- Requirements : - Docbook XML DTD (http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbook-xml-4.2.zip) - Docbook Stylesheets (http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/docbook/docbook-xsl-1.68.1.tar.bz2) - libxml2, xmllin (http://libpak.neoni.net/packages/LibPak_libxml2_dev.zip) - libxslt, xsltproc (http://libpak.neoni.net/packages/LibPak_libxslt_dev.zip) XML catalogs must be configured to avoid internet access : - in Docbook Stylesheets directory : sh ./INSTALL - in your .profile, add something like this : export XML_CATALOG_FILES="/boot/home/docbook-xsl-1.68.1/catalog.xml /boot/home/docbook-xml-4.2/catalog.xml /etc/xml/catalog"
Description
Languages
C++
52.2%
C
46.6%
Assembly
0.4%
HTML
0.3%
Python
0.1%