Mercurial > pidgin
view libfaim/README.gaim @ 730:e46cc3c6ff26
[gaim-migrate @ 740]
whoops
committer: Tailor Script <tailor@pidgin.im>
author | Eric Warmenhoven <eric@warmenhoven.org> |
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date | Mon, 21 Aug 2000 17:10:39 +0000 |
parents | 58106806ac2b |
children | 58a6e6e26695 |
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Hello, your good friend EW here with a nice little notice that I'm sure will affect the ten of you who actually read this. I'm going to start trying to get gaim to use Oscar through libfaim. As far as I can tell, the only thing it used to be able to do is sign on and receive IMs. I updated libfaim to what's currently in the libfaim CVS on sourceforge. As of right now, I've been able to implement most of the features libfaim offers. I'm going to try to make as few modifications as possible to the libfaim code. The only two modifications I'll probably ever make to it are 1) to make my life easier or 2) to fix a compilation error. That means that what you're getting when you enable oscar is basically faimtest (the very instructional program included with the libfaim source on sourceforge) with the Gaim GTK front-end. So far the changes to libfaim that I've made are: - remove mkbuildinfo.sh and put the #defines it creates into Makefile.am - add #if HAVE_GETADDRINFO in aim_ft.c for Solaris people And finally, a word of warning. Gaim/Faim is VERY buggy. Please, don't use this for anything other than laughs right now. Hopefully we'll get it working better soon (please help!). I think I'm ready to start dealing with bugs being reported against it now though. If you're going to report a bug, please check first that a) you're using the to-the-second absolute latest CVS version, b) it's not in the unsupported features/known issues lists below, c) someone hasn't already reported the bug on sourceforge (please check BOTH the open and closed bugs), and finally d) that you can reproduce it. Also, please *don't* IM me about a bug, as I have a tendency to forget things like that. Reporting it on sourceforge is a much better way of reporting bugs, because then other people can see that the bug is already known, and it's harder for me to forget. CURRENTLY SUPPORTED FEATURES ============================ Signing on Receiving IMs Sending IMs Being idle Being away/coming back Setting your info Getting users' info Getting users' away messages Chat: - joining rooms - leaving rooms - talking - inviting someone - getting invited - refreshing the chatlist in the preferences dialog ICQ!!! (Use your UIN instead of your SN to sign on) Direct IM (aka IM Image, for sounds and pictures) CURRENTLY UNSUPPORTED FEATURES ============================== Telling the server who's on your permit/deny lists Warning users/getting warned Chat: - whispering (this will never happen) Getting/setting dir info Changing your password File Transfer (Get/Send) Voice Chat Buddy Icon KNOWN ISSUES ============ - Oscar doesn't do whispering in chat rooms any more (and hasn't for quite a while, evidently). So if you want to "whisper" to someone, just IM them. - The permit/deny list stuff is really warped. I've commented it out; the code in libfaim is untested and it's causing way too many problems. - "Allow anyone" and "Deny some" serve the same function. That's not a bug. But "Allow anyone" works all the time (?) and "Deny some" doesn't work some of the time. That's a bug. - If you receive a message that's too large, gaim segfaults. I haven't watched this in gdb or gotten a backtrace on it, so I'm not exactly sure what the problem is. I think this actually happens on the TOC side of things too. - Gaim/TOC can do some RVOUS actions, and Gaim/Faim can do others. This is not because there is any difference in the protocols as far as the actual transfer is concerned. The only difference is what has been implemented and what hasn't been. - What *is* protocol-dependent about the RVOUS stuff is that only Oscar can request RVOUS actions, though both can receive them. - Warnings and Dir Info are not in libfaim yet, and so are not in Gaim/Faim yet. - There are also FIXME's scattered about gaim. Grep around for those, figure out what needs to be fixed, do that sort of thing. :) (Fixing the things listed in KNOWN ISSUES above, or any other bugs you happen to find, is a very good use of your time.) (You didn't hear that from me.)