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README.commits

      1 GLib is part of the GNOME git repository. At the current time, any
      2 person with write access to the GNOME repository, can make changes to
      3 GLib. This is a good thing, in that it encourages many people to work
      4 on GLib, and progress can be made quickly. However, GLib is a fairly
      5 large and complicated package that many other things depend on, so to
      6 avoid unnecessary breakage, and to take advantage of the knowledge
      7 about GLib that has been built up over the years, we'd like to ask
      8 people committing to GLib to follow a few rules:
      9 
     10 0) Ask first. If your changes are major, or could possibly break existing
     11    code, you should always ask. If your change is minor and you've
     12    been working on GLib for a while it probably isn't necessary
     13    to ask. But when in doubt, ask. Even if your change is correct,
     14    somebody may know a better way to do things.
     15 
     16    If you are making changes to GLib, you should be subscribed
     17    to gtk-devel-list (a] gnome.org. (Subscription address:
     18    gtk-devel-list-request (a] gnome.org.) This is a good place to ask
     19    about intended changes.
     20 
     21    #gtk+ on GIMPNet (irc.gimp.org, irc.us.gimp.org, irc.eu.gimp.org, ...)
     22    is also a good place to find GTK+ developers to discuss changes with,
     23    however, email to gtk-devel-list is the most certain and preferred
     24    method.
     25 
     26 1) Ask _first_.
     27 
     28 2) With git, we no longer maintain a ChangeLog file, but you are expected
     29    to produce a meaningful commit message. Changes without a sufficient
     30    commit message will be reverted. See below for the expected format
     31    of commit messages.
     32 
     33 Notes:
     34 
     35 * When developing larger features or complicated bug fixes, it is
     36   advisable to work in a branch in your own cloned GLib repository.
     37   You may even consider making your repository publically available
     38   so that others can easily test and review your changes.
     39 
     40 * The expected format for git commit messages is as follows:
     41 
     42 === begin example commit ===
     43 Short explanation of the commit
     44 
     45 Longer explanation explaining exactly what's changed, whether any
     46 external or private interfaces changed, what bugs were fixed (with bug
     47 tracker reference if applicable) and so forth. Be concise but not too brief.
     48 === end example commit ===
     49 
     50   - Always add a brief description of the commit to the _first_ line of
     51     the commit and terminate by two newlines (it will work without the
     52     second newline, but that is not nice for the interfaces).
     53 
     54   - First line (the brief description) must only be one sentence and
     55     should start with a capital letter unless it starts with a lowercase
     56     symbol or identifier. Don't use a trailing period either. Don't exceed
     57     72 characters.
     58 
     59   - The main description (the body) is normal prose and should use normal
     60     punctuation and capital letters where appropriate. Normally, for patches
     61     sent to a mailing list it's copied from there.
     62 
     63   - When committing code on behalf of others use the --author option, e.g.
     64     git commit -a --author "Joe Coder <joe (a] coder.org>" and --signoff.
     65 
     66 
     67 Owen Taylor
     68 13 Aug 1998
     69 17 Apr 2001
     70 
     71 Matthias Clasen
     72 31 Mar 2009
     73 

README.in

      1 General Information
      2 ===================
      3 
      4 This is GLib version @GLIB_VERSION@. GLib is the low-level core
      5 library that forms the basis for projects such as GTK+ and GNOME. It
      6 provides data structure handling for C, portability wrappers, and
      7 interfaces for such runtime functionality as an event loop, threads,
      8 dynamic loading, and an object system.
      9 
     10 The official ftp site is:
     11   ftp://ftp.gtk.org/pub/glib
     12 
     13 The official web site is:
     14   http://www.gtk.org/
     15 
     16 Information about mailing lists can be found at
     17   http://www.gtk.org/mailinglists.html
     18 
     19 To subscribe: mail -s subscribe gtk-list-request (a] gnome.org < /dev/null
     20 (Send mail to gtk-list-request (a] gnome.org with the subject "subscribe")
     21 
     22 Installation
     23 ============
     24 
     25 See the file 'INSTALL'
     26 
     27 Notes about GLib 2.20
     28 =====================
     29 
     30 ^ The functions for launching applications (e.g. g_app_info_launch() +
     31   friends) now passes a FUSE file:// URI if possible (requires gvfs
     32   with the FUSE daemon to be running and operational). With gvfs 2.26,
     33   FUSE file:// URIs will be mapped back to gio URIs in the GFile
     34   constructors. The intent of this change is to better integrate
     35   POSIX-only applications, see bug #528670 for the rationale.  The
     36   only user-visible change is when an application needs to examine an
     37   URI passed to it (e.g. as a positional parameter). Instead of
     38   looking at the given URI, the application will now need to look at
     39   the result of g_file_get_uri() after having constructed a GFile
     40   object with the given URI.
     41 
     42 Notes about GLib 2.18
     43 =====================
     44 
     45 * The recommended way of using GLib has always been to only include the
     46   toplevel headers glib.h, glib-object.h and gio.h. GLib enforces this by
     47   generating an error when individual headers are directly included.
     48   To help with the transition, the enforcement is not turned on by
     49   default for GLib headers (it is turned on for GObject and GIO).
     50   To turn it on, define the preprocessor symbol G_DISABLE_SINGLE_INCLUDES.
     51 
     52 Notes about GLib 2.16
     53 =====================
     54 
     55 * GLib now includes GIO, which adds optional dependencies against libattr
     56   and libselinux for extended attribute and SELinux support. Use
     57   --disable-xattr and --disable-selinux to build without these.
     58 
     59 Notes about GLib 2.10
     60 =====================
     61 
     62 * The functions g_snprintf() and g_vsnprintf() have been removed from
     63   the gprintf.h header, since they are already declared in glib.h. This
     64   doesn't break documented use of gprintf.h, but people have been known
     65   to include gprintf.h without including glib.h.
     66 
     67 * The Unicode support has been updated to Unicode 4.1. This adds several
     68   new members to the GUnicodeBreakType enumeration.
     69 
     70 * The support for Solaris threads has been retired. Solaris has provided
     71   POSIX threads for long enough now to have them available on every
     72   Solaris platform.
     73 
     74 * 'make check' has been changed to validate translations by calling
     75   msgfmt with the -c option. As a result, it may fail on systems with
     76   older gettext implementations (GNU gettext < 0.14.1, or Solaris gettext).
     77   'make check' will also fail on systems where the C compiler does not
     78   support ELF visibility attributes.
     79 
     80 * The GMemChunk API has been deprecated in favour of a new 'slice
     81   allocator'. See the g_slice documentation for more details.
     82 
     83 * A new type, GInitiallyUnowned, has been introduced, which is
     84   intended to serve as a common implementation of the 'floating reference'
     85   concept that is e.g. used by GtkObject. Note that changing the
     86   inheritance hierarchy of a type can cause problems for language
     87   bindings and other code which needs to work closely with the type
     88   system. Therefore, switching to GInitiallyUnowned should be done
     89   carefully. g_object_compat_control() has been added to GLib 2.8.5
     90   to help with the transition.
     91 
     92 Notes about GLib 2.6.0
     93 ======================
     94 
     95 * GLib 2.6 introduces the concept of 'GLib filename encoding', which is the
     96   on-disk encoding on Unix, but UTF-8 on Windows. All GLib functions
     97   returning or accepting pathnames have been changed to expect
     98   filenames in this encoding, and the common POSIX functions dealing
     99   with pathnames have been wrapped. These wrappers are declared in the
    100   header <glib/gstdio.h> which must be included explicitly; it is not
    101   included through <glib.h>.
    102 
    103   On current (NT-based) Windows versions, where the on-disk file names
    104   are Unicode, these wrappers use the wide-character API in the C
    105   library. Thus applications can handle file names containing any
    106   Unicode characters through GLib's own API and its POSIX wrappers,
    107   not just file names restricted to characters in the system codepage.
    108 
    109   To keep binary compatibility with applications compiled against
    110   older versions of GLib, the Windows DLL still provides entry points
    111   with the old semantics using the old names, and applications
    112   compiled against GLib 2.6 will actually use new names for the
    113   functions. This is transparent to the programmer.
    114 
    115   When compiling against GLib 2.6, applications intended to be
    116   portable to Windows must take the UTF-8 file name encoding into
    117   consideration, and use the gstdio wrappers to access files whose
    118   names have been constructed from strings returned from GLib.
    119 
    120 * Likewise, g_get_user_name() and g_get_real_name() have been changed
    121   to return UTF-8 on Windows, while keeping the old semantics for
    122   applications compiled against older versions of GLib.
    123 
    124 * The GLib uses an '_' prefix to indicate private symbols that
    125   must not be used by applications. On some platforms, symbols beginning
    126   with prefixes such as _g will be exported from the library, on others not.
    127   In no case can applications use these private symbols. In addition to that,
    128   GLib+ 2.6 makes several symbols private which were not in any installed
    129   header files and were never intended to be exported.
    130 
    131 * To reduce code size and improve efficiency, GLib, when compiled
    132   with the GNU toolchain, has separate internal and external entry
    133   points for exported functions. The internal names, which begin with
    134   IA__, may be seen when debugging a GLib program.
    135 
    136 * On Windows, GLib no longer opens a console window when printing
    137   warning messages if stdout or stderr are invalid, as they are in
    138   "Windows subsystem" (GUI) applications. Simply redirect stdout or
    139   stderr if you need to see them.
    140 
    141 * The child watch functionality tends to reveal a bug in many
    142   thread implementations (in particular the older LinuxThreads
    143   implementation on Linux) where it's not possible to call waitpid()
    144   for a child created in a different thread. For this reason, for
    145   maximum portability, you should structure your code to fork all
    146   child processes that you want to wait for from the main thread.
    147 
    148 * A problem was recently discovered with g_signal_connect_object();
    149   it doesn't actually disconnect the signal handler once the object being
    150   connected to dies, just disables it. See the API docs for the function
    151   for further details and the correct workaround that will continue to
    152   work with future versions of GLib.
    153 
    154 How to report bugs
    155 ==================
    156 
    157 Bugs should be reported to the GNOME bug tracking system.
    158 (http://bugzilla.gnome.org, product glib.) You will need
    159 to create an account for yourself.
    160 
    161 In the bug report please include:
    162 
    163 * Information about your system. For instance:
    164 
    165    - What operating system and version
    166    - For Linux, what version of the C library
    167 
    168   And anything else you think is relevant.
    169 
    170 * How to reproduce the bug.
    171 
    172   If you can reproduce it with one of the test programs that are built
    173   in the tests/ subdirectory, that will be most convenient.  Otherwise,
    174   please include a short test program that exhibits the behavior.
    175   As a last resort, you can also provide a pointer to a larger piece
    176   of software that can be downloaded.
    177 
    178 * If the bug was a crash, the exact text that was printed out
    179   when the crash occured.
    180 
    181 * Further information such as stack traces may be useful, but
    182   is not necessary.
    183 
    184 Patches
    185 =======
    186 
    187 Patches should also be submitted to bugzilla.gnome.org. If the
    188 patch fixes an existing bug, add the patch as an attachment
    189 to that bug report.
    190 
    191 Otherwise, enter a new bug report that describes the patch,
    192 and attach the patch to that bug report.
    193 
    194 Bug reports containing patches should include the PATCH keyword
    195 in their keyword fields. If the patch adds to or changes the GLib
    196 programming interface, the API keyword should also be included.
    197 
    198 Patches should be in unified diff form. (The -u option to GNU
    199 diff.)
    200 

README.win32

      1 Tor Lillqvist <tml (a] iki.fi>
      2 Hans Breuer <hans (a] breuer.org>
      3 
      4 The general parts, and the section about gcc and autoconfiscated build
      5 are by Tor Lillqvist. The sections about MSVC build is by Hans Breuer.
      6 
      7 General
      8 =======
      9 
     10 For prebuilt binaries (DLLs and EXEs) and developer packages (headers,
     11 import libraries) of GLib, Pango, GTK+ etc for Windows, go to
     12 http://www.gtk.org/download-windows.html . They are for "native"
     13 Windows meaning they use the Win32 API and Microsoft C runtime library
     14 only. No POSIX (Unix) emulation layer like Cygwin in involved.
     15 
     16 To build GLib on Win32, you can use either gcc ("mingw") or the
     17 Microsoft compiler and tools. For the latter, MSVC6 and later have
     18 been used successfully. Also the Digital Mars C/C++ compiler have been
     19 used. 
     20 
     21 People have also successfully cross-compiled GLib for Win32 from Linux
     22 using the cross-mingw packages.
     23 
     24 Note that to just *use* GLib on Windows, there is no need to build it
     25 yourself.
     26 
     27 On Windows setting up a correct build environment can be quite a task,
     28 especially if you are used to just type "./configure; make" on Linux,
     29 and expect things to work as smoothly on Windows.
     30 
     31 The following preprocessor macros are to be used for conditional
     32 compilation related to Win32 in GLib-using code:
     33 
     34 - G_OS_WIN32 is defined when compiling for native Win32, without
     35   any POSIX emulation, other than to the extent provided by the
     36   bundled Microsoft C library (msvcr*.dll).
     37 
     38 - G_WITH_CYGWIN is defined if compiling for the Cygwin
     39   environment. Note that G_OS_WIN32 is *not* defined in that case, as
     40   Cygwin is supposed to behave like Unix. G_OS_UNIX *is* defined by a GLib
     41   for Cygwin.
     42 
     43 - G_PLATFORM_WIN32 is defined when either G_OS_WIN32 or G_WITH_CYGWIN
     44   is defined.
     45 
     46 These macros are defined in glibconfig.h, and are thus available in
     47 all source files that include <glib.h>.
     48 
     49 Additionally, there are the compiler-specific macros:
     50 - __GNUC__ is defined when using gcc
     51 - _MSC_VER is defined when using the Microsoft compiler
     52 - __DMC__ is defined when using the Digital Mars C/C++ compiler
     53 
     54 G_OS_WIN32 implies using the Microsoft C runtime, normally
     55 msvcrt.dll. GLib is not known to work with the older crtdll.dll
     56 runtime, or the static Microsoft C runtime libraries libc.lib and
     57 libcmt.lib. It apparently does work with the debugging version of
     58 msvcrt.dll, msvcrtd.dll. If compiled with Microsoft compilers newer
     59 than MSVC6, it also works with their compiler-specific runtimes, like
     60 msvcr70.dll or msvcr80.dll. Please note that it's non totally clear if
     61 you would be allowed by the license to distrubute a GLib linked to
     62 msvcr70.dll or msvcr80.dll, as those are not part of the operating
     63 system, but of the MSVC product. msvcrt.dll is part of Windows.
     64 
     65 Building software that use GLib or GTK+
     66 =======================================
     67 
     68 Building software that just *uses* GLib or GTK+ also require to have
     69 the right compiler set up the right way. If you intend to use gcc,
     70 follow the relevant instructions below in that case, too.
     71 
     72 Tor uses gcc with the -mms-bitfields flag which means that in order to
     73 use the prebuilt DLLs (especially of GTK+), if you compile your code
     74 with gcc, you *must* also use that flag. This flag means that the
     75 struct layout rules are identical to those used by MSVC. This is
     76 essential if the same DLLs are to be usable both from gcc- and
     77 MSVC-compiled code. Such compatibility is desirable.
     78 
     79 When using the prebuilt GLib DLLs that use msvcrt.dll from code that
     80 uses other C runtimes like for example msvcr70.dll, one should note
     81 that one cannot use such GLib API that take or returns file
     82 descriptors. On Windows, a file descriptor (the small integer as
     83 returned by open() and handled by related functions, and included in
     84 the FILE struct) is an index into a table local to the C runtime
     85 DLL. A file descriptor in one C runtime DLL does not have the same
     86 meaning in another C runtime DLL.
     87 
     88 Building GLib
     89 =============
     90 
     91 Again, first decide whether you really want to do this.
     92 
     93 Before building GLib you must also have a GNU gettext-runtime
     94 developer package. Get prebuilt binaries of gettext-runtime from
     95 http://www.gtk.org/download-windows.html .
     96 
     97 Autoconfiscated build (with gcc)
     98 ================================
     99 
    100 Tor uses gcc 3.4.5 and the rest of the mingw utilities, including MSYS
    101 from www.mingw.org. Somewhat earlier or later versions of gcc
    102 presumably also work fine.
    103 
    104 Using Cygwin's gcc with the -mno-cygwin switch is not recommended. In
    105 theory it should work, but Tor hasn't tested that lately. It can
    106 easily lead to confusing situations where one mixes headers for Cygwin
    107 from /usr/include with the headers for native software one really
    108 should use. Ditto for libraries.
    109 
    110 If you want to use mingw's gcc, install gcc, win32api, binutils and
    111 MSYS from www.mingw.org.
    112 
    113 Tor invokes configure using:
    114 
    115 CC='gcc -mtune=pentium3 -mthreads' CPPFLAGS='-I/opt/gnu/include' \
    116 	LDFLAGS='-L/opt/gnu/lib -Wl,--enable-auto-image-base' CFLAGS=-O2 \
    117 	./configure --disable-gtk-doc --prefix=$TARGET
    118 
    119 The /opt/gnu mentioned contains the header files for GNU and (import)
    120 libraries for GNU libintl. The build scripts used to produce the
    121 prebuilt binaries are included in the "dev" packages.
    122 
    123 Please note that the ./configure mechanism should not blindly be used
    124 to build a GLib to be distributed to other developers because it
    125 produces a compiler-dependent glibconfig.h. For instance, the typedef
    126 for gint64 is long long with gcc, but __int64 with MSVC.
    127 
    128 Except for this and a few other minor issues, there shouldn't be any
    129 reason to distribute separate GLib headers and DLLs for gcc and MSVC6
    130 users, as the compilers generate code that uses the same C runtime
    131 library.
    132 
    133 The DLL generated by either compiler is binary compatible with the
    134 other one. Thus one either has to manually edit glibconfig.h
    135 afterwards, or use the supplied glibconfig.h.win32 which has been
    136 produced by running configure twice, once using gcc and once using
    137 MSVC, and merging the resulting files with diff -D.
    138 
    139 For MSVC7 and later (Visual C++ .NET 2003, Visual C++ 2005, Visual C++
    140 2008 etc) it is preferred to use specific builds of GLib DLLs that use
    141 the same C runtime as the code that uses GLib. Such DLLs should be
    142 named differently than the ones that use msvcrt.dll.
    143 
    144 For GLib, the DLL is called libglib-2.0-0.dll, and the import
    145 libraries libglib-2.0.dll.a and glib-2.0.lib. Note that the "2.0" is
    146 part of the "basename" of the library, it is not something that
    147 libtool has added. The -0 suffix is added by libtool and is the value
    148 of "LT_CURRENT - LT_AGE". The 0 is *not* part of the version number of
    149 GLib, although, for GLib 2.x.0, it happens to be the same. The
    150 LT_CURRENT - LT_AGE value will on purpose be kept as zero as long as
    151 binary compatibility is maintained. For the gory details, see
    152 configure.in and libtool documentation.
    153 
    154 Cross-compiling
    155 ===============
    156 
    157 It is possible to build GLib using a cross compiler. See
    158 docs/reference/glib/html/glib-cross-compiling.html (part of the GLib
    159 reference manual) for more information.
    160 
    161 Building with MSVC
    162 ==================
    163 
    164 If you are building from a SVN snapshot, you will not have any
    165 makefile.msc files. You should copy the corresponding makefile.msc.in
    166 file to that name, and replace any @...@ strings with the correct
    167 value.
    168 
    169 This is done automatically when an official GLib source distribution
    170 package is built, so if you get GLib from a source distribution
    171 package, there should be makefile.msc files ready to use (after some
    172 editing).
    173 
    174 The hand-written makefile.msc files, and the stuff in the "build"
    175 subdirectory, produce DLLs and import libraries that match what the
    176 so-called autoconfiscated build produces.
    177 
    178 All the MSVC makefiles are for the command line build with nmake.  If
    179 you want to use the VC-UI you can simply create wrapper .dsp makefiles
    180 (read the VC docs how to do so).
    181 
    182 Some modules may require Perl to auto-generate files. The goal (at
    183 least Hans's) is to not require any more tools.
    184 
    185 Build with:
    186 
    187 nmake -f makefile.msc
    188   or
    189 nmake -f makefile.msc DEBUG=1
    190 
    191 [
    192  The former will create 'release' versions of the DLLs. If you
    193  plan to distribute you DLLs please use this command. The latter 
    194  will create DLLs with debug information _and_ link them with
    195  msvcrtd.dll instead of msvcrt.dll. 
    196  Beware: There are known problems with mixing DLLs in one 
    197  application, which are build against different runtimes. 
    198  Especially the index-to-file mapping used by 'unix-style' file
    199  operation - _open() _pipe() etc. - breaks sometimes in strange 
    200  ways (for example the Gimp plug-in communication).
    201 ]
    202 
    203 Required libraries (not build from svn)
    204 ------------------
    205   libintl (gnu-intl),
    206 
    207 are available pre-built from the website mentioned above.
    208 
    209 Versioning
    210 ----------
    211 Instead of the Unix and auto* way of tracking versions and resolving
    212 dependencies (configure; make; make install) involving autoconf,
    213 automake, libtool and friends the MSVC build uses a different
    214 approach.
    215 
    216 The core of it's versioning is the file build/win32/module.defs.
    217 It contains entries of the form MODULE_VER, e.g.:
    218 
    219 	GLIB_VER = 2.0
    220 	LIBICONV_VER = 1.3
    221 
    222 and the placement of these modules defined as MODULE, e.g.:
    223 
    224 	GLIB = $(TOP)/glib
    225 	LIBICONV = $(TOP)/libiconv-$(LIBICONV_VER)
    226 
    227 whereas TOP is defined as the relative path from the respective
    228 module directory to your top build directory. Every makefile.msc
    229 needs to define TOP before including the common make file part
    230 make.msc, which than includes module.defs, like:
    231 
    232 TOP = ../..
    233 !INCLUDE $(TOP)/glib/build/win32/make.msc
    234 
    235 (Taken from gtk+/gdk/makefile.msc)
    236 
    237 With this provision it is possible to create almost placement
    238 independent makefiles without requiring to 'install' the libraries and
    239 headers into a common place (as it is done on Unix, and as Tor does
    240 when producing his zipfiles with prebuilt GLib, GTK+ etc).
    241 
    242 Special Files
    243 -------------
    244 	config.h.win32.in : @XXX_MAJOR_VERSION@ needs to be replaced by
    245 the current version/build number. The resulting file is to be saved
    246 as 'config.h.win32'. This should be automatically done if a package
    247 gets build on the Unix platform.
    248 
    249 	makefile.msc.in : @XXX_MAJOR_VERSION@ to be replaced. Save as
    250 makefile.msc.
    251 
    252 	<module>.def : every function which should be used from the outside of
    253 a dll needs to be marked for 'export'. It is common that one needs to change 
    254 these files after some api changes occured. If there are variables to be
    255 exported another mechanism is needed, like :
    256 
    257 	#ifdef G_OS_WIN32
    258 	#  ifdef GDK_COMPILATION
    259 	#    define GDKVAR __declspec(dllexport)
    260 	#  else
    261 	#    define GDKVAR extern __declspec(dllimport)
    262 	#  endif
    263 	#else
    264 	#  define GDKVAR extern
    265 	#endif
    266 
    267 
    268 
    269 Directory Structure
    270 -------------------
    271 all modules should be build in a common directory tree otherwise you 
    272 need to adapt the file 'module.defs'. They are listed here in increasing
    273 dependencies order.
    274 
    275 <common rootdir without spaces>
    276   |
    277   +- glib
    278   |   |
    279   |   +- build          : [this module lives in the SVN root dir]
    280   |   |   +- win32
    281   |   |       .\module.defs : defines (relative) locations of the headers
    282   |   |                       and libs and version numbers to be include 
    283   |   |                       in dll names
    284   |   |       .\make.msc    : include by almost every 'makefile.msc'
    285   |   |
    286   |   | .\README.WIN32  : more information how to build
    287   |   | .\glibconfig.h.win32.in : similar to config.h.win32.in
    288   |   | .\makefile.msc  : master makefile, sub dir makefiles should work 
    289   |   |
    290   |   +- glib
    291   |   +- gmodule
    292   |   +- gthread        : does _not_ depend on pthread anymore
    293   |   +- gobject
    294   |
    295   +- pango
    296   |   +- pango          : 'native' build does not require extra libs and
    297   |   |                 includes the minimal required text renderer
    298   |   |                 (there is also a currently slightly broken FreeType2 
    299   |   |                 based implementation for win32)
    300   |   +- modules (not yet build)
    301   |
    302   +- atk
    303   |   +- atk
    304   |       .\makefile.msc : build here
    305   |
    306   +- gtk+
    307   |   | .\config.h.win32 : for all the below
    308   |   |
    309   |   +- gdk-pixbuf
    310   |   |   .\gdk_pixbuf.rc.in : version resource for the DLLs. Needs
    311   |   |                 to be converted (filled with version info)
    312   |   |                 as described above.
    313   |   |
    314   |   +- gdk
    315   |   |   | .\makefile.msc : some auto-generation is needed to build in the
    316   |   |   |             in the subdirectory 
    317   |   |   +- win32
    318   |   |
    319   |   +- gtk
    320 
    321   |
    322   +- gimp
    323   |   .\makefile.msc    : master makefile to build The Gimp. The makefiles
    324   |                     from the sub dirs should work stand alone, but than
    325   |                     the user needs to know the build order
    326 
    327   |
    328   +- dia                : additionally depends on libart_lgpl (in SVN)
    329       |                 and libxml2 ( see http://www.xmlsoft.org/ )
    330       +- lib
    331       +- app
    332       +- objects
    333       +- plug-ins
    334           +- python
    335 
    336