- Fudge the numbers in the North, to improve location
of the pins and lines of latitude.
- Inuvik, Yellowknife, Cambridge Bay, Resolute look ok
- Thule, Scoresbysund look ok; Danmarkshavn a pixel or so too far North
- Reykjavik is a bit too far North
- Longyearbyen is a bit too far North
Since these places are off by one or two pixels, this becomes
invisible when a large pin + text label is placed on it.
The scaling on the map was a little off; the degrees of latitude
are a little wider there than around the equator and Europe.
- Johannesburg is in the right spot
- Hobart is no longer a suburb of Melbourne
- Punta Arenas is in Chile
Replace pin and text label with just a dot (to pinpoint where
locations are) and draw latitude lines on the globe when
DEbUG_TIMEZONE is set at compile time. Since there's probably
still timezone-related bugs (in particular in the images that
map points on the globe to timezones), leave this in the codebase.
This is orthogonal to the SKIP_* mechanism already documented
for avoiding modules. If the module is enabled, but its dependencies
are not present, don't bother building the module. This follows
e.g. plasmalnf as an "avoidably heavy dependency".
Related to a misplaced comment in ISSUE #956
- Add a *userShell* key, which can be left out (default, backwards-
compatible) to retain the old /bin/bash behavior, or explicitly
set to empty to defer to useradd-configuration, or explicitly
set to something non-empty to use that shell.
- This is prep-work for #964, which was caused by #955
- Original assumption was that distro's would have a working
useradd configuration; @abucodonosor already pointed out that
this was probably not the case, but I ignored that.
- more flexible way to keep (all kinds of) files from the host
system, into the target system.
- WIP: substitutions like in shellprocess (@@ROOT@@, @@HOME@@ probably)
- WIP: creating a JSON file from global settings
Extensive go-over on the partitioning code. #622 is maybe "possibly fixed",
but there's no real indication of what constitutes an invalid combination
of flags.
FIXES#884FIXES#951FIXES#953FIXES#622
- If there is a partition already (newly) created, then pass that
to the dialog so that it can use the setings previously applied
(e.g. mount point and flags).
- This avoids the case where you create or format a partition,
then click on it again to edit it and the previous settings are lost.
- Setup the lsit of flags consistently, by providing the available
and to-be-checked flags.
- In CreatePartitionDialog, assume that ~0 is all the flags.
This file is full of helper functions for the partition-editing
dialogs. At first it was just mount-point helper functions,
but there is other functionality that can be refactored.