From 860948d4a803c8180930c8bb1d833fcf490d0f2b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eric Hameleers Date: Sun, 22 Dec 2019 22:46:59 +0100 Subject: Release of KDE 5_19.12 for Slackware - PKGLIST updated with the list of available packages in this release (limited to slackware-current). - README updated. --- README.5_19.11 | 327 --------------------------------------------------------- 1 file changed, 327 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 README.5_19.11 (limited to 'README.5_19.11') diff --git a/README.5_19.11 b/README.5_19.11 deleted file mode 100644 index 4487882..0000000 --- a/README.5_19.11 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,327 +0,0 @@ -KDE5 -==== - -Here is KDE 5_19.11 for Slackware, consisting of the KDE -Frameworks 5.64.0, Plasma 5.17.2 and Applications 19.08.3 on top of Qt 5.13.2. - -Upgrading from the previous 5_19.10 is relatively straight-forward. - -KDE-5_19.11 is meant to be installed on top of Slackware -current. -It will *replace* any version of KDE 4 you might have installed! -The Plasma 5 Desktop has gotten rid of its Qt4 legacy. Since the release of -Applications 17.12 there's nothing left which is based on kdelibs4. - -What is the NEWS in this batch of updates: -- This month's updates to the 'deps' are: qt5 and PyQt5. - Fresh additions are: LibRaw and exiv2. These are stock Slackware packages - and the two are being upgraded ahead of Slackware, so that the Plasma5 - packages can pick them up. Pat added the shared libs for the older - releases to 'aaa_elflibs' so that none of the Slackware packages will - break when you install this month's Plasma5 packages. - And I have removed qt5-speech because I overlooked that this is already - part of the big qt5 package. -- I rebuilt kdelibs in the KDE4 section, just like Pat did for Slackware. - This removes hardcoded TLSv1 allowing TLSv1.1 and TLSv1.2. -- Frameworks 5.64.0 is an incremental stability release, see: - https://www.kde.org/announcements/kde-frameworks-5.64.0.php -- Plasma 5.17.2 is a an incremental bug-fix release in the 5.17 cycle of the - KDE desktop environment. See https://www.kde.org/announcements/plasma-5.17.2.php -- In plasma-extra I updated latte-dock. -- Applications 19.08.3 is a stability and bugfix update for the 19.08 cycle, - see https://www.kde.org/announcements/announce-applications-19.08.3.php -- In applications-extra I updated digikam, kile (finally 3.0 beta 3!), kstars - and kdevelop-pg-qt, kdevelop, kdev-php, kdev-python. Due to the new exiv2 - and LibRaw I rebuilt krename and krita. - -Further points of interest: -- If you have a KDE4-based application that needs library support on this - Plasma 5 desktop, let me know which of the removed packages needs to return - in 'kde/kde4'! -- There are a couple of *runtime* dependencies that I did not add to the - ktown repository, but you may want to consider installing them yourself: - * vlc - will give phonon another backend to select from. - * freerdp: access RDP servers through krdc. - * openconnect: support for Cisco's SSL VPN. - All of these can be found in my regular package repository. -- There's no more need to install any KDE4 package from Slackware. -- Lots of packages in the "deps" department are completely new to Slackware. - Since KDE 5 aka Plasma 5 is built on Qt5 (KDE 4 uses Qt4 as its base) - you'll find many Qt5 related packages. Also, in order for Qt4 and GTK based - applications to dock into the Plasma 5 system tray, more dependencies were - needed. Apart from updates to regular Slackware packages the new ones are: - OpenAL, PyQt5, SDL_sound, QScintilla, accountsservice, brotli, cfitsio, - cracklib, cryptopp, cryfs, ddcutil, dotconf, drumstick, dvdauthor, - espeak-ng, flite, freecell-solver, frei0r-plugins, grantlee-qt4, - hack-font-ttf, hyphen, id3lib, lensfun, libappindicator, libburn, - libdbusmenu-gtk, libdbusmenu-qt5, libdmtx, libindicator, libinput, - libpwquality, libsass, libwacom, libxkbcommon, mlt, ninja, noto-font-ttf, - noto-cjk-font-ttf, opencv, pcaudiolib, perl-path-tiny, perl-template-toolkit, - polkit-qt5-1, python-enum34, python3-random2, quazip, qca-qt5, qrencode, - qt-gstreamer, qt5, qt5-webkit, qtav, rttr, sassc, sni-qt, - speech-dispatcher, vid.stab, wayland and woff2. - As a side note, id3lib libinput libwacom and ninja have become part - of Slackware-current. - Technically that makes them redundant in the above listing, however I still - provide older Plasma5 packages for Slackware 14.2 so I left them in. - The phonon and poppler packages were extended so that they now support - Qt5 as well as Qt4. The gpgme package picked up Qt5 support. - Note that the SBo version of 'frei0r-plugins' package is called 'frei0r'. - If you have that SBo package installed, remove it. -- KDEI is gone. The localizations are now embedded in each package and - no longer available as separate 'kdei' packages. This is a by design. - You will get all languages installed by default. - -NOTE: -Also explained in more detail below, upgrading to this KDE 5 is non-trivial. -You will have to remove old KDE 4 packages manually. - -NOTE: -If you had installed KDE 4 as your default desktop previously, the removal -of KDE 4 packages will break the symbolic link '/etc/X11/xinit/xinitrc'. -An attempt to run 'startx' in a console will fail with a black screen. -After installing Plasma 5 for the first time, you need to run 'xwmconfig' -and select 'xinitrc.plasma' as your desktop session. - -NOTE: -If you install a 32bit program on a 64bit Slackware computer with multilib -and that program needs legacy system tray support (think of Steam for -instance), you will have to grab the 32-bit version of Slackware's -'libdbusmenu-qt' and my ktown-deps package 'sni-qt', and run the -'convertpkg-compat32 -i' command on them to create 'compat32' versions -of these packages. Then install both 'libdbusmenu-qt-compat32' and -'sni-qt-compat32'. Those two are mandatory addons for displaying -system tray icons of 32bit binaries in 64bit multilib Plasma5. - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -Install pre-compiled packages: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- - - -In order to install or upgrade KDE 5, follow these steps: - -Make sure you are not running KDE or even X ! -If you are running an X session, log out first to return to the console. -If your computer boots to runlevel 4 (graphical login) you first have to go -back to runlevel 3 (console) after logging out. Press to -switch to a console, logon there, and execute the command "init 3" to -switch from runlevel 4 to 3, thereby effectively stopping X. - -If you still have a KDE 4 installed, it must be removed first. No clean -upgrade path can be provided! Do as follows: - -If you have Slackware 14.2 or -current's default KDE 4.14.3 installed: - # removepkg /var/log/packages/*-4.14.3-* - # removepkg amarok - # removepkg kscreen - # removepkg kactivities - # removepkg kde-workspace - # removepkg kdeconnect-kde - # removepkg kdepim - # removepkg kdepimlibs - # removepkg kdev-python - # removepkg kdevelop-php - # removepkg kdevelop-php-docs - # removepkg libkscreen - # removepkg libmm-qt - # removepkg libnm-qt - # removepkg plasma-nm - # removepkg polkit-kde-agent-1 - # removepkg polkit-kde-kcmodules-1 - # removepkg wicd-kde - ... or instead of the above, simply run 'slackpkg remove kde'. - -Alternatively, in case you are already using an older release of my KDE 5 -packages, you need to look up that particular release in the list right below -(for instance: KDE 5_19.07) and then apply the actions shown for that KDE 5 -release *and* all more recent releases, i.e. work your way back up to this -paragraph. Note that some of the old KDE package names were obsoleted along -the way, they were split up, renamed or integrated and that is the reason -for some of the 'removepkg' lines you'll see below. -Here we go: - -If you have my 'ktown' set of KDE 5_19.10 installed: -- Upgrade to KDE 5_19.11 - Remove the packages that no longer exist in KDE 5_19.11: - # removepkg qt5-speech - -If you have my 'ktown' set of KDE 5_19.09 installed: -- Upgrade to KDE 5_19.10 - Remove the packages that no longer exist in KDE 5_19.10: - # removepkg kcalcore - # removepkg farstream \ - libaccounts-glib \ - libaccounts-qt5 \ - libnice \ - libotr \ - libsignon-glib \ - signon \ - signon-plugin-oauth2 \ - signon-ui \ - telegram-qt \ - telepathy-accounts-signon \ - telepathy-farstream \ - telepathy-gabble \ - telepathy-glib \ - telepathy-haze \ - telepathy-logger \ - telepathy-logger-qt5 \ - telepathy-mission-control \ - telepathy-morse \ - telepathy-qt5 - # removepkg kaccounts-integration \ - kaccounts-providers \ - ktp-accounts-kcm \ - ktp-approver \ - ktp-auth-handler \ - ktp-call-ui \ - ktp-common-internals \ - ktp-contact-list \ - ktp-contact-runner \ - ktp-desktop-applets \ - ktp-filetransfer-handler \ - ktp-kded-module \ - ktp-send-file \ - ktp-text-ui \ - signon-kwallet-extension - -If you have my 'ktown' set of KDE 5_19.07 installed: -- No further actions are needed. - -If you have my 'ktown' set of KDE 5_19.06 installed: -- No further actions are needed. - -If you have my 'ktown' set of KDE 5_19.05 installed: -- No further actions are needed. - -If you have my 'ktown' set of KDE 5_19.02 installed: -- No further actions are needed. - -If you have my 'ktown' set of KDE 5_19.01 installed: -- No further actions are needed. - -If you have my 'ktown' set of KDE 5_18.12 installed: -- Really? - -Then proceed with installing/upgrading KDE 5 as outlined below. - -NOTE: -The example commands below are for Slackware -current but you can use -these commands for Slackware 14.2 as well; by replacing the /current/ -string with /14.2/ (provided there is a suitable 'ktown' release available -for Slackware 14.2 of course). - -NOTE: -Instead of using the mirror host http://slackware.nl/alien-kde/ (its rsync URI -is rsync://slackware.nl/mirrors/alien-kde/), you could choose the alternative -mirror http://slackware.uk/people/alien-kde/ (its rsync URI is -rsync://slackware.uk/people/alien-kde/) - -NOTE: -If you use 'slackpkg' to automate your upgrades, be sure to blacklist my -custom packages or else slackpkg will always try to replace my packages -with the stock Slackware versions if the package names are identical. -As an example, you can add the following lines to the file -"/etc/slackpkg/blacklist" to prevent this unintentional downgrading to KDE4: - # These three lines will blacklist all SBo, alien and multilib packages: - [0-9]+_SBo - [0-9]+alien - [0-9]+compat32 -If on the other hand you are using the 'slackpkg+' extension for slackpkg -then your "/etc/slackpkg/blacklist" file should *not* contain the above -lines! The slackpkg+ extension enables the use of 3rd-party repositories -with slackpkg and then Plasma5 package upgrades will be handled properly. - - -To make it easy for you, here is a one-line command that downloads the whole -'5' directory (excluding the sources), with 32-bit and 64-bit packages. - - # rsync -Hav rsync://slackware.nl/mirrors/alien-kde/current/latest/ latest/ - -Or else, if you want to download packages for just one of the two supported -architectures, you would run one of the following commands instead. - -If you want only the 64-bit packages: - # rsync -Hav --exclude=x86 rsync://slackware.nl/mirrors/alien-kde/current/latest/ latest/ -If you want only the 32-bit packages: - # rsync -Hav --exclude=x86_64 rsync://slackware.nl/mirrors/alien-kde/current/latest/ latest/ - -Assuming you just downloaded the bits you want from the directory tree "latest" -you must now change your current directory to where you found this README -(which is the directory called 'latest'). If you used one of the above "rsync" -commands then you can simply do: - - # cd latest - -From within this directory, you run the following commands as root: - - On Slackware 32-bit: - # upgradepkg --reinstall --install-new x86/deps/*.t?z - # upgradepkg --reinstall --install-new x86/kde/*/*.t?z - - On Slackware 64-bit: - # upgradepkg --reinstall --install-new x86_64/deps/*.t?z - # upgradepkg --reinstall --install-new x86_64/kde/*/*.t?z - -NOTE: - If you installed the slackpkg+ extension and configured a 'ktown' repository - with the label 'ktown' then the commands to upgrade would become: - # slackpkg update - # slackpkg install ktown - # slackpkg upgrade-all - The first command fetches the repository metadata from the remote server(s); - The second command installs any new package that was added to the repository; - And the third command will upgrade all installed packages, including the - 'ktown' packages, to their latest versions in the repositories. - -Finally: -Check if any ".new" configuration files have been left behind by -the upgradepkg commands. Compare them to their originals and decide -if you need to use them. - # find /etc/ -name "*.new" -A graphical (ncurses) tool for processing these "*.new" files is slackpkg: - # slackpkg new-config - -Then reboot your system. -IF this is the first time you run Plasma5, be aware that Baloo will -tax your CPU fairly heavily for a while as it indexes the content of -the files on your hard disk. After this initial indexing operation finishes, -Ballo will get out of your way and stay there. - -If all you want is to install the packages I created, then you can skip the -remainder of the README which details how to (re)compile the packages from -their sources; it is not required reading material. - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -Building it all from source: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- - -Sources and scripts are separated from the packages in my 'ktown' repository. -If you want the sources for KDE 5, run the following command to download them -(downloading from a mirror will usually be much faster): - - # rsync -Hav rsync://slackware.nl/mirrors/alien-kde/source/latest/ latest/ - -There are a lot of 'dependencies' for KDE 5 which you'll have to compile and -install before attempting to compile KDE 5. Compiling and installing these -dependencies on Slackware-current is hopefully (have not tested the scripts -'updates.SlackBuild' and 'alldeps.SlackBuild' in a long time) as easy as this: - # cd latest/deps - # ./updates.SlackBuild - # cd - - -Be prepared to wait a *long* time since this will compile a new Qt5 package -among others. The finished packages will be stored in /tmp and will already -have been installed/upgraded automatically. - -Then if you want to compile the KDE packages on your computer, run: - # cd latest/kde - # ./kde.SlackBuild - -Wait a long time, and you will find the new packages in /tmp/kde_build . -Note that these packages will already have been installed by kde.SlackBuild ! -Reboot your computer and login to a Plasma session. - - -============================================================================== - Eric Hameleers / alien at slackware dot com / 11-nov-2019 -- cgit v1.2.3