Mercurial > pidgin.yaz
view mkinstalldirs @ 9550:de83d2cb87a4
[gaim-migrate @ 10379]
" When unqueuing messages and "sounds while away" is set,
Gaim will play a message receieved for every message
unqueued. If there are a large number of messages, my
SB Audigy tries playing them all and ends up creating a
crackly ugly sound. Friends of mine have complained
about this as well.
This patch fixes that by making sure sounds are
disabled when unqueuing messages. Sounds will be
re-enabled afterwards if necessary.
Something to note is that playing the sounds when
unqueuing messages crashes Gaim on occasion, with about
50% success. After applying this patch, the crashes
stopped. The backtrace isn't particularly
helpful...it's all question marks and valgrind doesn't
say much either. Crash or no crash though, this
eliminates annoying behavior so that is probably more
important.
I originally fixed this for my plugin AutoProfile, but
since they use similar code for queuing messages, it
would be nice if Gaim has it as well :)" --Casey Ho
committer: Tailor Script <tailor@pidgin.im>
author | Luke Schierer <lschiere@pidgin.im> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 16 Jul 2004 14:56:47 +0000 |
parents | a0b7b72e278d |
children |
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#! /bin/sh # mkinstalldirs --- make directory hierarchy scriptversion=2004-02-15.20 # Original author: Noah Friedman <friedman@prep.ai.mit.edu> # Created: 1993-05-16 # Public domain. # # This file is maintained in Automake, please report # bugs to <bug-automake@gnu.org> or send patches to # <automake-patches@gnu.org>. errstatus=0 dirmode="" usage="\ Usage: mkinstalldirs [-h] [--help] [--version] [-m MODE] DIR ... Create each directory DIR (with mode MODE, if specified), including all leading file name components. Report bugs to <bug-automake@gnu.org>." # process command line arguments while test $# -gt 0 ; do case $1 in -h | --help | --h*) # -h for help echo "$usage" exit 0 ;; -m) # -m PERM arg shift test $# -eq 0 && { echo "$usage" 1>&2; exit 1; } dirmode=$1 shift ;; --version) echo "$0 $scriptversion" exit 0 ;; --) # stop option processing shift break ;; -*) # unknown option echo "$usage" 1>&2 exit 1 ;; *) # first non-opt arg break ;; esac done for file do if test -d "$file"; then shift else break fi done case $# in 0) exit 0 ;; esac # Solaris 8's mkdir -p isn't thread-safe. If you mkdir -p a/b and # mkdir -p a/c at the same time, both will detect that a is missing, # one will create a, then the other will try to create a and die with # a "File exists" error. This is a problem when calling mkinstalldirs # from a parallel make. We use --version in the probe to restrict # ourselves to GNU mkdir, which is thread-safe. case $dirmode in '') if mkdir -p --version . >/dev/null 2>&1 && test ! -d ./--version; then echo "mkdir -p -- $*" exec mkdir -p -- "$@" else # On NextStep and OpenStep, the `mkdir' command does not # recognize any option. It will interpret all options as # directories to create, and then abort because `.' already # exists. test -d ./-p && rmdir ./-p test -d ./--version && rmdir ./--version fi ;; *) if mkdir -m "$dirmode" -p --version . >/dev/null 2>&1 && test ! -d ./--version; then echo "mkdir -m $dirmode -p -- $*" exec mkdir -m "$dirmode" -p -- "$@" else # Clean up after NextStep and OpenStep mkdir. for d in ./-m ./-p ./--version "./$dirmode"; do test -d $d && rmdir $d done fi ;; esac for file do set fnord `echo ":$file" | sed -ne 's/^:\//#/;s/^://;s/\// /g;s/^#/\//;p'` shift pathcomp= for d do pathcomp="$pathcomp$d" case $pathcomp in -*) pathcomp=./$pathcomp ;; esac if test ! -d "$pathcomp"; then echo "mkdir $pathcomp" mkdir "$pathcomp" || lasterr=$? if test ! -d "$pathcomp"; then errstatus=$lasterr else if test ! -z "$dirmode"; then echo "chmod $dirmode $pathcomp" lasterr="" chmod "$dirmode" "$pathcomp" || lasterr=$? if test ! -z "$lasterr"; then errstatus=$lasterr fi fi fi fi pathcomp="$pathcomp/" done done exit $errstatus # Local Variables: # mode: shell-script # sh-indentation: 2 # eval: (add-hook 'write-file-hooks 'time-stamp) # time-stamp-start: "scriptversion=" # time-stamp-format: "%:y-%02m-%02d.%02H" # time-stamp-end: "$" # End: