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516 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
516 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
This is a port of GNU Gettext @VER@ to MSDOS/DJGPP.
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TO USE THE GNU GETTEXT LIBRARY YOU **MUST** MODIFY YOUR C-LIBRARY.
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PLEASE, READ SECTION #2 (Installing the binary package) CAREFULLY
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TO LEARN HOW TO INSTALL THE GNU GETTEXT LIBRARY AND HOW TO CHANGE
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YOUR C-LIBRARY AND SYSTEM HEADER FILE.
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TO USE THE GNU GETTEXT LIBRARY YOU **MUST** DOWNLOAD AND INSTALL
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LICV17B.ZIP TOO. THIS IS **NOT** OPTIONAL.
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IT IS NOT RECOMMED TO DOWNLOAD THE GNU DISTRIBUTION OF GETTEXT
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BECAUSE ONLY THE DJGPP PORT WILL CONTAIN THE REQUIRED HEADER AND
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OBJECT FILE TO PATCH THE C LIBRARY.
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1.: DJGPP specific changes.
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=======================
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The DJGPP specific changes are the followings:
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1) The conflict existing between the BORLAND-compatibility gettext function
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from DJGPP's libc.a defined in conio.h and the GNU gettext function from
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libintl.a defined in libintl.h has been removed. But this conflict can not
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be removed **WITHOUT** changing a system header file and libc.a.
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1.1) libc.a and system header changes.
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In conio.c, the BORLAND-compatibility gettext function has been renamed
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into _conio_gettext. In conio.h some code has been added to check if
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libintl.h is included or not by the same source file. If libintl.h is NOT
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included, the BORLAND-compatibility gettext function will be available as
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gettext. If libintl.h has been included then the BORLAND-compatibility
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gettext function will **ONLY** be available as _conio_gettext.
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The BORLAND-compatibility gettext function is now available as gettext
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and _conio_gettext.
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1.2) GNU gettext library changes.
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If both headers, libintl.h and conio.h, are included in the same source
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file the gettext keyword makes **ALWAYS** reference to the GNU gettext
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function and **NEVER** to the BORLAND-compatibility gettext function.
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2) The binary package gtxt@packageversion@b.zip contains all needed files to get NLS
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support for the following DJGPP ports:
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bison-1.32 (bsn132s.zip)
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enscript-1.6.2 (ens162s.zip)
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fileutils-4.0 (fil40s.zip)
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grep-2.4 (grep24s.zip)
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id-utils-3.2 (idu32s.zip)
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make-3.79.1 (mak3791s.zip)
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recode-3.6 (rcode36s.zip)
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sed-3.02.80 (sed3028s.zip)
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sharutils-4.2c (shar42cs.zip)
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sh-utils-2.0j (shl20js.zip)
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tar-1.12a (tar112as.zip)
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texinfo-4.0 (txi40s.zip)
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textutils-2.0 (txt20s.zip)
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See section #4 for further information about this issue.
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To implement NLS support for one of those packages you will also need
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to download the following packages:
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gtxt@packageversion@b.zip (binaries of GNU Gettext @VER@)
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licv17b.zip (binaries of GNU libiconv 1.7)
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fil40b.zip (binaries of GNU Fileutils 4.0)
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shl20jb.zip (binaries of GNU Sh-utils 2.0j)
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2.: Installing the binary package.
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==============================
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2.1.: To use this binary package you **MUST** install licv17b.zip or later
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first. licv17b.zip provides the required functionality to recode the
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.mo files at run time from the unix charsets used to create them to the
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dos codepages used to display them. Copy the binary distribution into
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the top DJGPP installation directory. If you are installing Gettext on
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a dual DOS/WINDOWS 9X systems, you *MUST* first turn off the generation
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of numeric tails for 8.3 aliases Windows creats for long file names.
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For information about how to do this, please read the DJGPP FAQ List
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V 2.30, chapter 22.19: "How to Set Up a Dual DOS/Windows Installation".
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It should be noticed that neither the libintl.a library nor the
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binaries (xgettext.exe, gettext.exe, etc.) contain any code to handle
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nuneric tails of short file names. This implies that if you install
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the binary packages in a DOS box of Win9X (LFN) **WITHOUT** turning
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off the numeric tail generation you will **NOT** be able to use NLS
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on plain DOS. Once again: if you want NLS support on both Win9X **AND**
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on plain DOS you **MUST** turn off the numeric tail generation **BEFORE**
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installing the binary package. After having installed the package
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you can turn on numerical tail generation again if you wish.
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All this also applies to any other package that has been compiled with
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NLS support. You **MUST** turn off numeric tail generation every time
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you install a package that has been compiled with NLS or the binaries
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will **NOT** be able to find their .mo files (translations) when you
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switch to plain DOS.
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2.2.: Copy the binary distribution into the top DJGPP installation directory,
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just unzip it preserving the directory structure running *ONE* of the
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following commands:
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unzip32 gtxt@packageversion@b.zip or
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djtarx gtxt@packageversion@b.zip or
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pkunzip -d gtxt@packageversion@b.zip
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2.3.: Changing libc.a and conio.h.
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Apart from the ussual directories, the binary package will create the
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following directory:
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%DJDIR%/gnu/gtxt-@treeversion@/djgpp/djdev-2.03
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where %DJDIR% stands for the root of your DJGPP installation tree.
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Cd into the djdev-2.03 directory. You will find the following files:
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conio.diffs
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conio.h
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conio.o
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conio.diffs is a patch file that documents the changes I have done against
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the files of the original djdev203.zip and djlsr203.zip distributions.
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This file is not needed by the average user. conio.h is the modified header
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and conio.o is the recompiled new conio.c file that will replace the old
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conio.o contained in libc.a.
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For all commands that will follow now I will assume that you have
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cd'ed into the %DJDIR%/gnu/gtxt-@treeversion@/djgpp/djdev-2.03 directory,
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where %DJDIR% represents the path to your DJGPP installation. First,
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you should backup your old header and library. For this task, run the
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following command sequence (cp is the copy program from fil40b.zip):
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cp /dev/env/DJDIR/include/conio.h /dev/env/DJDIR/include/conio.bak
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cp /dev/env/DJDIR/lib/libc.a /dev/env/DJDIR/lib/libc.bak
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Now you can copy the new header into your include directory
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running the command:
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cp conio.h /dev/env/DJDIR/include
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Now you can substitute the old conio.o file in libc.a with the new one.
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For this task you will need the ar program from binutils.
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Run the command:
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ar -rv /dev/env/DJDIR/lib/libc.a conio.o
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You are done.
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2.3.: The NLS controling environment variables, LANG and LANGUAGE, must be
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set to their appropiate values. The exact way how these variables
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should be set depends on your operating system:
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* For Windows 98 systems:
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- Click START;
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- Choose Programs->Accessories->System Tools->System Information;
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- Click Tools in the menu-bar, then choose "System Configuration";
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- Use the tab provided there for editing your AUTOEXEC.BAT as
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explained below.
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* For Windows NT systems:
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- Right-click "My Computer", then select "Properties";
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- Click the "Environment" tab;
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- Add a new variables LANG and LANGUAGE and set their values to the
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wanted language codes file as explained below.
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* For all other systems (DOS, Windows 3.X and Windows 95): use any
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text editor, e.g. the standard EDIT, to edit the file AUTOEXEC.BAT
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in the root directory of the boot drive (usually, C:).
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The values of the two environment variables LANG and LANGUAGE should be
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set like this:
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set LANG=xx
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set LANGUAGE=yy:zz
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xx, yy and zz are place holders for the wanted language codes. For
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posible values, please read below.
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The LANG entry is obligatory, the LANGUAGE entry may be omited. The
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LANG variable selects the locale charsets (dos codepage) to be used to
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display the program's output and the catalog (.mo file) that contains
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the translated strings to be used. The LANGUAGE variable allows you to
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select an alternate catalog than the one stipulated by LANG. Replace
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xx, yy and zz by the language code of the catalogs you want to use. It
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should be noticed that LANGUAGE has *ALWAYS* higher priority than LANG.
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The LANG variable not only selects a catalog, it also specifies the dos
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codepage that will be used as locale charset. All this means that the
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translation strings contained in the catalogs (.mo files) will be
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recoded at runtime to the dos codepage stipulated by the value of LANG.
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This runtime recoding is needed because the .mo files may have been
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written using a charset that is not compatible with the charset that
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will be used on the machine and OS where the .mo files contents will be
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displayed. The .po files of the GNU packages, from which the .mo files
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are generated, are typical examples of this. Usualy, they have been
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written using some ISO-8859-nn charset (an unix charset) and shall be
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displayed on a DOS/WIN95 machine that uses some dos codepage.
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Some examples:
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If you only want to use the catalog containing the translations for
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your mother tongue (in my case the spanish translations) the above
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lines will only use the LANG variable and will look like this:
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set LANG=es
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In this case, LANG defines the locale charset (CP850 in this case) to
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be used for the on-the-fly recoding of the catalog (.mo file) contents
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**AND AT THE SAME TIME** the translation/language (.mo file) to be used.
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If you want to use the spanish (es) and german (de) catalogs the above
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lines will look like this:
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set LANG=es
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set LANGUAGE=es:de
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In this case a DJGPP binary that has been compiled with NLS support
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will first search for the spanish translation of a string. If a
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translation for that particular string can not be found in the spanish
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.mo file then it will search for a german translation of that string in
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the german .mo file and if a german translation of that string can also
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not been found it will default to display the build-in english string.
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No mather if a spanish, a german or an english build-in string is
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selected, the string is always recoded to the dos codepage stipulated
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by LANG. In this case: CP850. In the above example, LANGUAGE defines
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the set of languages to be used and their priority (from left to right).
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At the same time, LANG defines the locale charset (dos codepage) to be
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used to recode **ALL** translated string, no matter which language
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(.mo file) is used.
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If you want to reverse this search order the above lines would look
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like this one:
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set LANG=es
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set LANGUAGE=de:es
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Now let us assume that an user wants to use the swedish catalogs on
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a machine that loads codepage CP437 when it is booted. It should be
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noticed that the locale charset for Sweden is CP850 and not CP437.
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In this case, the lines must look like this:
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set LANG=en_US
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set LANGUAGE=sv
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LANG reflects the available codepage/charset and LANGUAGE selects the
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wanted translation catalog. en_US means CP437. Now, the contents of the
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catalog are recoded to CP437 instead to CP850 because CP437 is the
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codepage used to display messages on screen. Of course, not every
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combination of catalogs and locale charset (dos codepages) makes sense.
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E.G.: selecting as locale charset chinese (LANG=zh_TW) and the french
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translations (LANGUAGE=fr) will certainly not generate an usefull
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screen output.
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The content of LANG is a language code. Examples are fr for french,
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en_US for US english, etc. This language code is an alias for the
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locale charset to be used for runtime recoding. The complete list of
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all available aliases can be found in %DJDIR%/lib/charset.alias. This
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file is a table with two entries: left entry is the alias (en_US,
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de_AT, etc.), right entry is the corresponding dos codepage that will
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be used for that language code (alias). It should be noticed that it is
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also possible to select a codepage directely. E.G.: Instead of setting:
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set LANG=en_US
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you may directely set:
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set LANG=CP437
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cp437 or 437 are also valid settings for CP437. This overwrites any
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settings in charset.alias. The settings in the environment always
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overwrite the settings in charset.alias. Please note that if you omit
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LANG, LANGUAGE will not be honored at all. Because the information
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about which locale charset shall be used for recoding is needed,
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if LANG is omitted by the user this information will not be available
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and consequently LANGUAGE will be ignored and no translation at all
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will be done.
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If for some reason you want to disable NLS, then you should comment
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out the LANG variable or remove them from your AUTOEXEC.BAT file or
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select 'C' as your catalog:
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set LANG=C
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or clear it by setting:
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set LANG=
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You can also change during a DOS session in Win9X or on plain DOS the
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values of the LANG and LANGUAGE variables by setting or clearing them
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from the DOS prompt.
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2.5.: To create an entry for the gettext info docs in your dir file
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run from the top DJGPP installation directory the command:
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install-info --info-dir=./info ./info/gettext.info
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2.6.: The binaries distributed in this package have NLS support.
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E.G. run the command:
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xgettext
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and the binary should talk to you in your mother tonge, if
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supported.
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For futher information about GNU gettext please read the info docs.
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3.: Building the binaries from sources.
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===================================
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3.1.: To build the binaries you will need the following binary packages:
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djdev203.zip (or a later but NOT a prior version)
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bsh203b.zip (or a later but NOT a prior version)
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gcc303b.zip, bnu2112b.zip, mak3791b.zip,
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fil40b.zip, shl20jb.zip, txt20b.zip,
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txi40b.zip, grep24b.zip, sed3028b.zip,
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licv17b.zip
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If you want to run the check you will need also:
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dif272b.zip
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If you want to recreate the html docs you will also need:
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gro116b.zip (or a later but NOT a prior version)
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perl561b.zip (or a later but NOT a prior version)
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All this packages can be found in the v2gnu directory of any
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Simtel.NET mirror.
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You must have licv17b.zip or a later version installed before
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configuring or compiling the package or the configuration and build
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process will fail due to unresolved references to libiconv.a
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You will need bsh203b.zip or later and *NOT* a prior version or the
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build will fail. The same applies to djdev203.zip.
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This updated versions have been recompiled with djdev203.zip and know
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about the "/dev/env" functionality introduced with djdev203.zip. All the
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other packages are the ones I have used to build the binaries from this
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sources. Previuos versions of this packages may do the job as well but
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I have not tested this.
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3.2.: Create a temporary directory and copy the source package into the
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directory. If you download the source distribution from one of the
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DJGPP archives, just unzip it preserving the directory structure
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running *ONE* of the following commands:
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unzip32 gtxt@packageversion@s.zip or
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djtarx gtxt@packageversion@s.zip or
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pkunzip -d gtxt@packageversion@s.zip
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Source distributions downloaded from one of the GNU FTP sites need
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some more work to unpack. First, you *MUST* use the `djtar' program
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to unzip the package. That is because some file names in the official
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distributions need to be changed to avoid problems on the various
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platforms supported by DJGPP. `djtar' can rename files on the fly given
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a file with name mappings. The distribution includes a file
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`djgpp/fnchange.lst' with the necessary mappings. So you need first
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to retrieve that file, and then invoke `djtar' to unpack the
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distribution. Here is how:
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djtar -x -p -o @V@/djgpp/fnchange.lst @V@.tar.gz > lst
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djtar -x -n lst @V@.tar.gz
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(The name of the distribution archive and the top-level directory will
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be different for versions other than @VER@.)
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It is always recommended to download the DJGPP packages from some
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Simtel.NET mirror and *NOT* the original GNU distribution because
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only the binary distribution of the DJGPP port will contain the
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files needed to patch libc.a. This are: conio.h and conio.o.
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3.3.: This package is preconfigured for NLS support and for run time recoding
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due to the functionality provided by libiconv.a from licv17b.zip.
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This implies that licv17b.zip *MUST* be installed *before* you try to
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compile the package or the build process will fail.
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It should be noticed that when you compile your own binaries with NLS
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you must also *always* link with libiconv.a
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If you compile this package with a later version of libc.a or if you
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prefer no NLS support at all you will have to reconfigure this package.
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The configuration batch file of this package, located in the djgpp
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directory, allows you to enable or disable NLS support and to compile
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from a different partition than from where the sources are located.
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config.bat always configures the package for NLS support enabled and
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for in-place compilation if no options are given.
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The available NLS options are:
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NLS
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no-NLS
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If for some reason you want no NLS support you will have to reconfigure
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the package. For this purpose cd into the top srcdir (gtxt-@treeversion@)
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and run the following commands:
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make distclean
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djgpp\config no-NLS
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This step is **NOT** optional and the "distclean" option must be used.
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If you do not use the "distclean" option the config.cache file will not
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be deleted. In this case you are **NOT** reconfiguring because the
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configuration informations are read from the cache file instead of being
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newly computed.
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You **MUST** specify "no-NLS" or config.bat will default to "NLS".
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To build the programs in a directory other than where the sources are,
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you must add a parameter that specifies the source directory,
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e.g:
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x:\src\gnu\gtxt-@treeversion@\djgpp\config x:/src/gnu/gtxt-@treeversion@ no-NLS
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Lets assume you want to build the binaries in a directory placed on a
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different drive (z:\build in this case) from where the sources are,
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then you will run the following commands:
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z:
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cd \build
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x:\src\gnu\gtxt-@treeversion@\djgpp\config x:/src/gnu/gtxt-@treeversion@ no-NLS
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If you want NLS support you will omit "no-NLS" or replace it by
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"NLS" in the above examples.
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The order of the "NLS" option and the srcdir option does *NOT* matter.
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You *MUST* use forward slashes to specify the source directory.
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This batch file will set same environment variables, make MSDOS
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specific modifications to the Makefile.ins and supply all other
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needed options to the configure script.
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3.4.: To compile the package run from the top srcdir the command:
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make
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3.5.: Now you can run the tests if you like.
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From the top srcdir run the command:
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make check
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Non test should fail.
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3.6.: To install the binaries, header, library, catalogs, and info docs
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run the following command from the top srcdir:
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make install CATALOGS="xx.gmo yy.gmo zz.gmo"
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or
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make install CATALOGS="xx.gmo yy.gmo zz.gmo" prefix=z:/some/other/place
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This will install the products into your DJGPP installation tree given
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by the default prefix "/dev/env/DJDIR". If you prefer to install them
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into some other directory you will have to set prefix to the appropiate
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value. Replace xx, yy and zz by the language codes of the catalogs you
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want to install.
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3.7.: Now you have to set the LANG environment variable.
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Please refer to section 2.3 for further information.
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4.: NLS support for other DJGPP ports.
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==================================
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This package contains all needed files to get NLS support for the
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following DJGPP ports:
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bison-1.32 (bsn132s.zip)
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enscript-1.6.2 (ens162s.zip)
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fileutils-4.0 (fil40s.zip)
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grep-2.4 (grep24s.zip)
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id-utils-3.2 (idu32s.zip)
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make-3.79.1 (mak3791s.zip)
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recode-3.6 (rcode36s.zip)
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sed-3.02.80 (sed3028s.zip)
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sharutils-4.2c (shar42cs.zip)
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sh-utils-2.0j (shl20js.zip)
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tar-1.12a (tar112as.zip)
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texinfo-4.0 (txi40s.zip)
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textutils-2.0 (txt20s.zip)
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The files needed are placed in the NLS_for_djgpp_packages tree located
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in djgpp directory. I will explane this using grep-2.4 as example.
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This means that file names or command names may change from port to port.
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The configuration batch files and the sed scripts of every package have
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the same name as the original ones that this ones will replace. If you
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are familiar with the original package you shall have no difficulties
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in reconfigure the package for NLS support.
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Please inspect the tree NLS_for_djgpp_packages to see what files will
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be replaced.
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4.1.: To reconfigure and recompile a source package with NLS support you
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*MUST* install the gtxt@packageversion@b.zip and licv17b.zip packages
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first. NLS support will **NOT** work with any prior version of the above
|
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mentioned packages. Before installing gtxt@packageversion@b.zip and licv17b.zip
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you *MUST* deinstall the old packages if you ever have installed them.
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|
For this purpose use the provided manifest files from the old packages.
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|
Old packages means previous beta releases of gtxt@packageversion@b.zip and licv17b.zip
|
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*AND* also previous versions of gettext like gettext 0.10.32, etc.
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4.2.: We will assume that the required sources will be unzipped into
|
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a directory called src.
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Copy grep24s.zip into /src and decompress them preserving the directory
|
|
structure running the command:
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|
unzip32 *.zip
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|
This will create the directory:
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|
/src/gnu/grep-2.4
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The binary package gtxt@packageversion@b.zip will create the directory:
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|
%DJDIR%/gnu/gtxt-@treeversion@/djgpp/NLS_for_djgpp_packages/grep-2.4
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This directory contains all needed files.
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|
The files are:
|
|
grep-2.4/djgpp/config.bat (new .bat file that replaces the original one.)
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|
grep-2.4/djgpp/config.sed (sed script needed to modify configure.)
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|
grep-2.4/djgpp/config.site (defaults for configure.)
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Now we will xcopy the needed files into the original grep-2.4 directory.
|
|
First we will cd into the grep-2.4 directory and then we will run the
|
|
following command:
|
|
xcopy %DJDIR%\gnu\gtxt-@treeversion@\djgpp\NLS_for_djgpp_packages\grep-2.4 /v/s/e
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|
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|
4.3.: Before the package can be reconfigured, the old configuration must be
|
|
cleared. Run the command:
|
|
make distclean
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|
|
|
This will remove all Makefiles, config.h and config.cache file with old
|
|
configuration information. This step is *NOT* optional and it must be
|
|
used the "distclean" target.
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|
|
|
4.4.: Now the package can be configured running the command:
|
|
djgpp\config
|
|
if you want to build the products in the /src/grep-2.4 directory, or:
|
|
c:\src\grep-2.4\djgpp\config c:/src/grep-2.4
|
|
if you want to build the products on a different drive or directory.
|
|
You can still configure without NLS support if you want. In this case
|
|
simply add the option "no-NLS" to the above commands.
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|
|
|
4.5.: Now the package can be compiled and checked by running the commands:
|
|
make
|
|
make check
|
|
The first command will create also all the available translation
|
|
catalogs (.gmo files). Before running the tests you should clear
|
|
the LANGUAGE and/or LANG variable or the tests will probably fail.
|
|
|
|
4.6.: Now the products can be installed by running the command:
|
|
make install CATALOGS="xx.gmo yy.gmo"
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|
|
|
Replace xx and yy by the appropiate language codeof the catalogs you
|
|
want to install. If you omit CATALOGS then all catalogs will be installed.
|
|
You can install into a temp directory if you want by specifying a prefix:
|
|
make install prefix=z:/tmp CATALOGS="xx.gmo yy.gmo zz.gmo"
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|
|
|
4.7.: Now you have to set the LANG and LANGUAGE environment variable.
|
|
Please refer to 2.4.
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|
|
Send GNU gettext specific bug reports to <bug-gnu-gettext@gnu.org>.
|
|
Send suggestions and bug reports concerning the DJGPP port to
|
|
comp.os.msdos.djgpp or <djgpp@delorie.com>.
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Enjoy.
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Guerrero, Juan Manuel <st001906@hrz1.hrz.tu-darmstadt.de>
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