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This one is long overdue as I keep forgetting to update
the published copy of generated documentation all the time.
Note that you must pass DOCS_PUBLISH (as a local directory
or host:dir suitable for rsync/ssh) via make arguments,
environment or ~/.mkimage/profiles.mk file.
Neither qupzilla nor pcmanfm-qt will fire this up
automatically when dealing with a PDF file so rather
adding a reminder to have a look at it some day.
This needs further refinement regarding p7/t7 specifically:
NM behaviour regarding defaults differs in sisyphus and this
has led to livecds booting with DHCP networking but installed
systems booting without configured interfaces.
Commit 78f2158 left those images which required NM but not
its applet explicitly broken (as in "no applet at all");
this should probably be redone alike to browser feature
but let's provide a 20140612 band-aid at least.
I thought about this again and came to conclusion that bringing
alteratord and ahttpd up or down should rather be done at the same
time as backends and frontend are useless without each other
(at least for your average sysadmin).
Matt Lewandowsky suggested that alteratord be enabled
but ahttpd be disabled so as to avoid extra port being
listened to out-of-box but to be able to turn web GUI on
when needed.
Non-GUI packages moved to base+nm pkglist to enable standalone
installation of those; and GTK bits left in desktop+nm for use
by images lacking their own new and improved(tm) variant.
Note that both GNOME3 and KDE4 aren't lacking anymore.
This is a similar trouble: p7/t7 branches had
plasma-applet-networkmanager while sisyphus has
switched to kde4-plasma-nm* (there's a bunch of
subpackages there, basically all of them desired).
The current branches lack both firefox 29+ and
firefox-classic_theme_restorer, correspondingly;
sisyphus has those; the feature shouldn't pose
any problems in both cases, should it?
Suggested by frbrgeorge@ and sounds quite reasonable
given that live-rescue.iso is very immature yet and
there are only a few -- but compelling -- reasons
to provide a graphical rescue image, gparted being
one of them for sure.
It's actually worth working into the offline docs probably
but it appears that overlooking this howto's existence is
easier than I thought; thanks manowar@ for pointing this out.
The logic is pretty much the same as with live.mk,
even somewhat extended as this has actually been
the driver of this change: some images like icewm
or lxqt-based ones might show off other browsers
explicitly (in addition to zerg@'s request).
Firefox was the very reasonable default for initial livecd
implementation but now that at least initial browser chooser
infrastructure is in place it's time to un-hardwire its use.
It's _the_ default but switchable now so that images providing
a comprehensive browser can avoid feature duplication.
This one has been asking to be implemented for too long already,
and zerg@ was interested in a bit more lean and mean regular-kde4
either (there are two browsers provided with it via metapackage).
There's another reason to do it recently: Firefox Australis UI
is not exactly the best for many of us, and good ol' seamonkey
seems preferable for "vintage"/low-resource images coming with
icewm or windowmaker.
This should better lurk here unless someone (including myself)
either forgets or doesn't realize the inobvious chain of the
assumptions made for the read-only warranty to actually work.
This is actually downplaying: the net effect is that
a few images continue to carry krb5-ticket-watcher
and have avahi service enabled by default while most
of the images have one "weird" item less on their menus
and a few hundred kilobytes less in total RSS.
These are not really needed by default in lightweight
distros sporting reduced application and services set,
and the heavier ones will take relatively less hit
by default while being more ready as ALT Domain clients
(which was the whole motivation behind adding the feature
and the corresponding pkglist).