Benjamin Berg 41d5b1455f data: Create generic org.gnome.Shell.target
Move the GNOME shell service file adapation for x11/wayland into the
target/service files. This means that the session definition can simply
pull in org.gnome.Shell.target, without having to care about whether it
is starting an X11 or wayland session.

Note that this currently requires fork'ing to do the test. This will
however not be needed in the long term when ConditionEnvironment becomes
available (see https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/15817).

We technically do not need to use template units. But doing so means
that the unit can be translated to the app id more easily (though it is
not yet completely clear how this should look like in the long term).

https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/895
2020-07-31 13:53:31 +00:00
..
2019-02-05 16:25:57 +01:00

Gnome-shell OSK layouts are extracted from CLDR layout definitions:
https://www.unicode.org/cldr/charts/latest/keyboards/layouts/index.html

Updating these involves several steps:

1) Downloading and unzipping the tarball found at:
   http://www.unicode.org/Public/cldr/latest/keyboards.zip

   This file contains XML files describing the keyboard layouts.

2) Cloning the cldr2json script at:
   git://repo.or.cz/cldr2json.git

   It will be used to convert the XML files into JSON that can be
   directly consumed by gnome-shell.

3) Running the script to produce the files:
   ./cldr2json <input-directory> <output-directory>

   We shall usually use the "android" folder, since that's most
   complete, and similar to our UI and target sizes. And the target
   directory must be data/osk-layouts in this repository.

4) Modify gnome-shell-osk-layouts.gresource.xml to include the files

5) Do git add on the updated/new files, and git commit.


Or alternatively:

1) Run update-osk-layouts.sh

2) Do git add and git commit