Motivation: Version 0.30 released; Port to GStreamer 1.0.
I believe the warning in doc/TODO:
o libcanberra-0.28 [drops support for GNOME2; don't update for now -- wiz]
comes from:
Version 0.28 released; Hook properly into GNOME 3.0 sessions; this
drops support for GNOME 2.0 sessions, but not applications.
which essentially comes from:
index aa0a3a3..210d2c1 100644
--- a/src/libcanberra-login-sound.desktop.in
+++ b/src/libcanberra-login-sound.desktop.in
@@ -4,6 +4,6 @@ Name=GNOME Login Sound
Comment=Plays a sound whenever you log in
Exec=@bindir@/canberra-gtk-play --id="desktop-login" --description="GNOME Login"
OnlyShowIn=GNOME;
-AutostartCondition=GNOME /desktop/gnome/sound/event_sounds
+AutostartCondition=GSettings org.gnome.desktop.sound event-sounds
X-GNOME-Autostart-Phase=Application
X-GNOME-Provides=login-sound
AFAICT, given that I have not found a desktop-login audio file anywhere
in pkgsrc (there is a login file), --id="desktop-login" will never match,
so we can't break something which doesn't work. If this analysis is wrong,
changing one line in 2 .desktop files is trivial. Relying on
gstreamer 0.10 working is worse.
while here, add gtk3 option and enabled by default.
News
Fri 18 Feb 2011:
Version 0.27 released; Gtk+ 3.x fixes; add new tool to implement
boot-up sounds when used with systemd; other fixes
to address issues with NetBSD-6(and earlier)'s fontconfig not being
new enough for pango.
While doing that, also bump freetype2 dependency to current pkgsrc
version.
Suggested by tron in PR 47882
* Gtk+ 3.x fixes.
Changes 0.25:
* Optionally build with Gtk+ 3.x in addition to Gtk+ 2.x.
Changes 0.24:
* GTK code is now fine with GSEAL. Minor fixes in the PulseAudio backend,
other fixes.
Changes 0.23:
* various minor fixes in the pulse and gstreamer backends as well in the Vala
API. Support for the recently standardized Vorbis 6.1/7.1 multichannel modes.
This changes the buildlink3.mk files to use an include guard for the
recursive include. The use of BUILDLINK_DEPTH, BUILDLINK_DEPENDS,
BUILDLINK_PACKAGES and BUILDLINK_ORDER is handled by a single new
variable BUILDLINK_TREE. Each buildlink3.mk file adds a pair of
enter/exit marker, which can be used to reconstruct the tree and
to determine first level includes. Avoiding := for large variables
(BUILDLINK_ORDER) speeds up parse time as += has linear complexity.
The include guard reduces system time by avoiding reading files over and
over again. For complex packages this reduces both %user and %sys time to
half of the former time.