Mercurial > pidgin
view README @ 28859:50256289be74
*** Plucked rev 1cd91846f484f7d7090d25b0e65d851a0dadcb90 (e894e488d2219b69664de488ee1af7f275f8817d):
Improved handling of the 0x00d charset in AIM, which is sent by mobile devices speaking ISO-8859-1. Try UTF-8 first (the encoding sent by iChat in a Direct IM with non-ASCII characters), then fall back to ISO-8859-1. Fixes #a13544, a bug created with the fix for iChat DIM encoding new in libpurple 2.6.4
applied changes from 6f3a1b3c52803e11d4cda1e0537c1270599e8d8e
through ed0a2a35c7e22519df27c50069c22b03e01c027a
*** Plucked rev e8ba4281669ae86859fd4e29f5d8ea0286af3903 (f05c54b03e6bbfdbff38c01697fbd353a969e05e):
Changelog the AIM/ICQ issue. Refs #10900.
author | Daniel Atallah <daniel.atallah@gmail.com> |
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date | Thu, 07 Jan 2010 23:43:26 +0000 |
parents | 56042b2f8b64 |
children |
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Purple, Pidgin and Finch ======================== See AUTHORS and COPYRIGHT for the list of contributors. libpurple is a library intended to be used by programmers seeking to write an IM client that connects to many IM networks. It supports AIM, ICQ, XMPP, MSN and Yahoo!, among others. Pidgin is an graphical IM client written in C which uses the GTK+ toolkit. Finch is a text-based IM client written in C which uses the ncurses toolkit. These programs are not endorsed by, nor affiliated with, AOL nor any other company in any way. BUILD ===== Read the 'INSTALL' file for more detailed directions. These programs use the standard ./configure ; make. You need to use gmake, BSD make probably won't work. Remember, run ./configure --help to see what build options are available. In order to compile Pidgin you need to have GTK+ 2.0 installed (as well as the development files!). The configure script will fail if you don't. If you don't have GTK+ 2.0 installed, you should install it using your distribution's package management tools. For sound support, you also need gstreamer 0.10 or higher. For spellchecking support, you need libgtkspell (http://gtkspell.sf.net/). Your distro of choice probably already includes these, just be sure to install the development packages. RUN === You should run 'make install' as root to make sure plugins and other files get installed into locations they want to be in. Once you've done that, you only need to run 'pidgin' or 'finch'. To get started, simply add a new account. If you come across a bug, please report it at: http://pidgin.im PLUGINS ======= If you do not wish to enable the plugin support within Purple, run the ./configure script with the --disable-plugins option and recompile your source code. This will prevent the ability to load plugins. 'make install' puts the plugins in $PREFIX/lib/purple (PREFIX being what you specified when you ./configure'd - it defaults to /usr/local). Purple looks for the plugins in that directory by default. Plugins can be installed per-user in ~/.purple/plugins as well. Pidgin and Finch also look in $PREFIX/lib/pidgin and $PREFIX/lib/finch for UI-specific, respectively. To build a plugin from a .c file, put it in the plugins/ directory in the source and run 'make filename.so', e.g. if you have the .c file 'kickass.c', put it in the plugins/ directory, and from that directory, run 'make kickass.so'.