[Qt-jambi-interest] Git guide
Raymond Martin
laseray at gmail.com
Mon Dec 21 11:24:04 CET 2009
Hi Helge,
> Even though a bit sparse, I added some info about what you should
> do to get going with compiling your own version of QtJambi 4.6 if
> that's what you're looking for. You may find this in the bottom of
>
> http://qt.gitorious.org/qt-jambi/pages/Home
Okay, that is good enough to start from.
> I now have a stable compile setup on
>
> 2.6.24-24 32bit Linux kernel using gcc 4.2.4 (Ubuntu 8.04 server) and
> Windows XP 32bit using MSVC 2005.
>
> I would like to share some binary builds with the people wanting to
> play with Jambi without having to go through the build steps, but I
> don't have any good place to upload them. Also, I'm struggeling a bit
> with generating a full set of javadoc, which would be nice to put
> into the package.
I will try other builds if people have them, for testing purposes, etc.
Mainly on Linux(Mandriva), but can get to Mac and Windows also.
> What about creating a plain Google Code project for Qt Jambi to at
> least share these? So far, our best shot was codehaus, but they seem
> to ignore my pleas for shelter :-/ There are of course other alternatives
> like sourceforge and java.net, but google code seems to be the
> easiest to use and most the most popular these days. Guess the bug tracker
> isn't much to talk about compared to Jira, but it could be a nice
> start until some better alternative comes along... What do you
> think?
Not sure why you believe google code seems to be the easiest. SourceForge
has upgraded its offerings to provide use of well-known open source
applications in a hosted mode for bug tracking, forums, etc. It also seems
to have the most options for the usual project needs of anything I know of.
Plus, no waiting time for project setup anymore. Just register a project and
start going.
Regards,
Raymond
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