From 29c25cb913fde0a8320bca9b9ea2cc82fbe2ec94 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: David Walter Seikel Date: Tue, 22 Apr 2014 14:51:57 +1000 Subject: Move most of the README's and other docs into the new docs directory. --- Bookie/README | 33 --------------------------------- 1 file changed, 33 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 Bookie/README (limited to 'Bookie') diff --git a/Bookie/README b/Bookie/README deleted file mode 100644 index 1a49f27..0000000 --- a/Bookie/README +++ /dev/null @@ -1,33 +0,0 @@ -Shared dynamic libraries is a bit of an issue for cross platform code. -LL viewers deal with it by including their own copies of the libraries -they use. This bypasses the idea of sharing them, and thus uses too -much resources. On the other hand, it seems to be the Windows way of -doing things, lots of Windows packages I have seen include their own -copies of libraries. Mac Os X seems to do the same, each application is -installed as it's own directory, filled with it's own copies of -libraries. Not a lot of sharing going on. Linux and the BSDs do the -right thing, most libraries are actually shared. Except that LL viewers -STILL bring their own libraries. - -I think the main difference is having a proper package management -system. Apt, RPM, and portage (I think) can track dependencies on -libraries, install the libraries automatically, and even have different -versions of libraries installed side by side. Without this, the OS has -no official way of tracking library dependencies, so every one has to -supply their own. Sure Mac OS X has had a few package systems ported to -it, but none of them are the official one, so developers can't rely on -them. - -SledjHamr has to deal with this, and try to do so in some sort of smart -way. As usual, the right way to do things is generally to do the -opposite of what LL does. lol - -Bookie should be a sub system that probes the OS, trying to see if -there's some sort of OS store of libraries, and try to find reasonable -versions of the libraries needed in that. If not found, it could invoke -an OS specific method of installing a suitable library. If that fails, -it can download a SledjHamr specific version into the SledjHamr -installed directory. So it tries to do the right thing first, and -gradually fallsback to doing the wrong thing like LL does. - -That's the theory, in practice, gonna be a pain. -- cgit v1.1