view PROGRAMMING_NOTES @ 7033:cf1126ba1834

[gaim-migrate @ 7596] Multiple copies of gaim installed at different locations no longer attempt to load the same, possibly incompatible plugins. It does this by saving the base filenames of the plugins, rather than the full names, and attempts to load them at the particular copy's plugin directory. Now a released gaim in the system default prefix and a development gaim in a home directory will no longer try to load each other's plugins. They'll each load their own versions of each. Thanks to Robot101 for the patch. committer: Tailor Script <tailor@pidgin.im>
author Christian Hammond <chipx86@chipx86.com>
date Mon, 29 Sep 2003 22:46:15 +0000
parents 10b5ac17fdd6
children da88e2cd5c53
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Notes on keeping GAIM OS independant
------------------------------------

General
-------
- Use G_DIR_SEPARATOR_S and G_DIR_SEPARATOR for paths

- Use g_getenv, g_snprintf, g_vsnprintf

- Use gaim_home_dir instead of g_get_home_dir or g_getenv("HOME")

- Make sure when including win32dep.h that it is the last header to
  be included.

- Open binary files when reading or writing with 'b' mode.

  e.g: fopen("somefile", "wb");

  Not doing so will open files in windows using defaut translation mode. 
  i.e. newline -> <CR><LF>

Paths
-----

- DATADIR, LOCALEDIR & LIBDIR are defined in wingaim as functions.
  Doing the following will therefore break the windows build:

  printf("File in DATADIR is: %s\n", DATADIR G_DIR_SEPARATOR_S "pic.png");

  it should be:

  printf("File in DATADIR is: %s%s%s\n", DATADIR, G_DIR_SEPARATOR_S, "pic.png");

- When writing out paths to .gaimrc, use wgaim_escape_dirsep. This is necessary
  because the Windows dir separator '\' is being used to escape characters, when
  paths are read in from the .gaimrc file.

PLUGINS & PROTOS
----------------

- G_MODULE_EXPORT all functions which are to be accessed from outside the
  scope of its "dll" or "so". (E.G. gaim_plugin_init)

- G_MODULE_IMPORT all global variables which are located outside your
  dynamic library. (E.G. connections)

  (Not doing this will cause "Memory Access Violations" in Win32)