void-packages/srcpkgs/gdm/template
2011-10-20 09:11:13 +02:00

113 lines
3.6 KiB
Text

# Template file for 'gdm'
pkgname=gdm
version=3.2.1.1
distfiles="${GNOME_SITE}/$pkgname/3.2/$pkgname-$version.tar.xz"
build_style=gnu_configure
configure_args="--disable-schemas-install --disable-scrollkeeper
--with-gconf-schema-file-dir=/usr/share/gconf/schemas
--with-at-spi-registryd-directory=/usr/libexec --without-tcp-wrappers
--disable-static"
short_desc="GNOME Display Manager"
maintainer="Juan RP <xtraeme@gmail.com>"
homepage="http://www.gnome.org"
license="GPL-2"
checksum=85a1383f93870fb5d47a938cc2e04b6f0d74cb611a2b5d94d9651b78a5ccffbd
long_desc="
GDM is the GNOME Display Manager, it is the little proggie that runs
in the background, runs your X sessions, presents you with a login box
and then tells you to piss off because you forgot your password. It
does pretty much everything that you would want to use xdm for, but
does not involve as much crack. It doesn't use any code from xdm, and
has a more paranoid and safer design overall. It also includes many
features over xdm, the biggest one of which is that it is more user
friendly, even if your X setup is failing. The goal is that users
should never, ever have to use the command line to customize or
troubleshoot gdm. It of course supports xdmcp, and in fact extends
xdmcp a little bit in places where I thought xdm was lacking (but is
still compatible with xdm's xdmcp)."
conf_files="
/etc/gdm/custom.conf
/etc/pam.d/gdm
/etc/pam.d/gdm-autologin
/etc/pam.d/gdm-fingerprint
/etc/pam.d/gdm-password
/etc/pam.d/gdm-smartcard
/etc/pam.d/gdm-welcome"
keep_empty_dirs=yes
subpackages="gdm-devel"
gconf_schemas="gdm.schemas"
gtk_iconcache_dirs="/usr/share/icons/hicolor"
# Create the 'gdm' system user/group.
system_accounts="gdm"
gdm_homedir="/var/lib/gdm"
systemd_services="gdm.service"
Add_dependency run glibc
Add_dependency run glib
Add_dependency run libX11
Add_dependency run libXrandr
Add_dependency run dbus-glib
Add_dependency run dbus-libs
Add_dependency run libxklavier
Add_dependency run libXau
Add_dependency run pam
Add_dependency run accountsservice
Add_dependency run nss
Add_dependency run nspr
Add_dependency run gtk+3
Add_dependency run gdk-pixbuf
Add_dependency run cairo
Add_dependency run pango
Add_dependency run GConf
Add_dependency run upower
Add_dependency run libXdmcp
Add_dependency run atk
Add_dependency run freetype
Add_dependency run fontconfig
Add_dependency run libcanberra
Add_dependency run dconf
Add_dependency run ConsoleKit-x11
Add_dependency run hicolor-icon-theme
Add_dependency run polkit-gnome
Add_dependency build pkg-config
Add_dependency build intltool
Add_dependency build gnome-doc-utils
Add_dependency build gobject-introspection
Add_dependency build pam-devel
Add_dependency build nss-devel
Add_dependency build accountsservice-devel
Add_dependency build gtk+3-devel
Add_dependency build GConf-devel
Add_dependency build upower-devel
Add_dependency build libcanberra-devel
Add_dependency build libXrandr-devel
Add_dependency build libxklavier-devel
Add_dependency build at-spi2-core-devel
Add_dependency full xorg-server
post_install()
{
# Use our own pam files.
rm -f ${DESTDIR}/etc/pam.d/*
for f in gdm gdm-autologin gdm-fingerprint gdm-password gdm-smartcard \
gdm-welcome; do
vinstall ${FILESDIR}/${f}.pam 644 etc/pam.d ${f}
done
# Install systemd service.
vinstall ${FILESDIR}/gdm.service 644 lib/systemd/system
# Install GConf schema.
mv ${DESTDIR}/usr/share/gconf/schemas/*.schemas ${wrksrc}
gconf-merge-schema ${DESTDIR}/usr/share/gconf/schemas/${gconf_schemas} \
--domain ${pkgname} ${wrksrc}/*.schemas
rm -rf ${DESTDIR}/var/run ${DESTDIR}/var/gdm
chmod 1770 ${DESTDIR}/var/log/gdm
chmod 700 ${DESTDIR}/var/lib/gdm/.config/dconf
}