Skip to content
This repository has been archived by the owner on Nov 19, 2023. It is now read-only.

Latest commit

 

History

History
64 lines (36 loc) · 1.82 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

64 lines (36 loc) · 1.82 KB

Please note

This extension is not maintained, anymore. Please contribute to this fork:

https://github.com/zeners/gnome-shell-teatime

It is published as TeaTimer on extensions.gnome.org.


Premise

Before you do anything, please make sure, that you have the following packages installed:

  • libglib2.0-dev
  • intltool
  • gnome-common

The name of the package may vary from distribution to distributon. The first two packages provide m4-files needed for the generation of the configure script. The files in need are:

  • intltool.m4
  • gsettings.m4

They should be located somewhere in /usr/share/aclocal.

Installaton

If everything is in place, run

./autogen.sh

to generate the configure script. If everything worked well, do:

./configure --prefix=/usr && make

To install the extension to your home directory, run:

make local-install

Or to install it for all users you need administrator rights. Thus you've to use something like sudo or become root via su. Using sudo, simply run:

sudo make install

In case you can't find the applet in gnome-tweak-tool, restart gnome-shell (using Alt +F2, enter: r).

If you wish to translate TeaTime to your language, have a look at the directory po.

A handy zip file can be created using:

make zip   # This is the same you get via http://extensions.gnome.org

Thanks to Thomas Liebetraut for the new build system. Get the latest version from: https://github.com/tommie-lie/gnome-shell-extensions-template

Contribution

Patches are welcome. But please make sure the code you contribute is formated properly. Please run beautify-code.sh before sending pull requests. Therefore, you'll need to install the python tool js-beautify, e.g. via pip install jsbeautifier.