It's been made redundant by the RPATH changes
The only platform that gets the dubious honor of actually needing an
LD_LIBRARY_PATH is PocketBook, because of InkView.
Co-authored-by: Benoit Pierre <benoit.pierre@gmail.com>
Bump base to pull in the aforementioned RPATH changes ;).
https://github.com/koreader/koreader-base/pull/1638
platform: do not pass a directory on the command line.
The home directory will be properly set by Device.home_dir.
It was sometimes crashing when opened with no args.
Fixes: #7049
This apparently fatally upsets the WM on FW >= 5.12.4
I don't have the HW to test it, and I've been saying FW 5.12.x is evil
from the get go, so, eh.
Re #6117
* Kindle FL shenanigans
Either fix#5986, or break a whole crapload of weird corner-cases.
Possibly the insane AutoFrontLight checks.
* Make fl step 0 usable on devices where 0 doesn't turn the light off.
By fudging an extra step on our own side.
* Also, add some debug logging around wmctrl to try to figure out what's
happening there...
Update shellcheck and shfmt to the latest version.
Fixes <https://github.com/koreader/koreader/issues/5152>.
Btw, you can apply shellcheck suggestions with a command like:
```
shellcheck --include=SC2250 -f diff *.sh | git apply
```
* Prefer our own FBInk binary
* Get rid of the CRe config tweaks
* Oops, actually ship libkohelper in the KUAL extension.
* Bump extension version
* Flush to disk before printing final status message
It's generally broken, and useless there.
The main intended use-case is the DX/DXg, because of its larger screen &
low RAM leading to more severe memory constraints.
* Handle OTA updates during the restart loop on Kobo/Kindle
So we can actually process OTA updates without ever truly exiting
KOReader (i.e., via the "Restart KOReader" menu entry) ;).
* With a bonus version normalizer fix.
* And a zsync bump/fix to avoid softlocks with OpenStack HTTP frontends (also, pull those from the OTA mirror list).
* Switch all initial highlights to "fast" update
i.e., everything that does an invert
Plus a few other things that refresh small UI elements onTap
Re #3130
* Tweak refreshtype for a number of widgets:
* Fix iconbutton dimen
* Make touchmenu flash on close & initial menu popup. Full-screen on close.
* Use flashing updates when opening/closing dictionary popup. Full-screen on close.
* Switch FileManager to partial.
It's mostly text, and we want flash promotion there.
* Make configdialog & menu flash on exit
* Make FLWidget flash on close
* virtualkeyboard: flash on layout change & popup.
* Potentially not that great workaround to ensure we actually see the
highlights in the FM's chevrons
* Flash when closing BookStatus Widget
* Optimize away a quirk of the dual "fast" update in touchmenu
* Promote updates to flashing slightly more agressively.
* Document what each refreshtype actually does.
With a few guidelines on their optimal usecases.
* Switch remaining scheduleIn(0.0) to nextTick()
* Tighter scheduling timers
Shaving a hundred ms off UI callbacks...
* Cache FFI C Library namespace
* Ask MuPDF to convert pixmaps to BGR on Kobo
Fix#3949
* Mention koxtoolchain in the README
re #3972
* Kindle: Handle *all* fonts via EXT_FONT_DIR instead of bind mounts insanity
* Make black flashes in UI elements user-configurable
(All or nothing).
* Jot down some random KOA2 sysfs path
* Refresh Kindle model ID routines
* Pickup current OTA packages
We stopped shipping files w/ the full .tar.gz extension a looooong time
ago.
* And actually generally handle current packages properly
* Kindle screensaver handling experiment
WIP, because there's a fair bit of insanity left in there.
Namely, USBMS is anathema. We simply shouldn't do that, at all,
but the system allows us to do it and basically shoot ourselves in the
head one way or another.
* Don't try to handle the insanity that would be USBMS on Kindles
* Yay, one less thing to worry about :).
* Okay, that should be much saner...
Since the whole deal w/ letting the WM handle stuff was for SO, restrict
that to SO devices.
The other concern was USBMS, but we can't support it.
* Reword that
* And move that comment inside the branch, like its counterpart
* Travis: speed up by caching base and running luacheck earlier
* ignore bin and install for git status change detection
* skip coverage except on official master branch. It adds 3 whole minutes and does nothing to prevent regressions
* also cache ~/.luarocks. It evens out but would generally prevent remote timeout shenenigans
* remove base cache dir before caching with verbose remove to see what's going on
* more inclusive shell code quality analysis
* fixed more shellcheck issues
* better shellcheck/shfmt debugging info