Juanito


Group: Members
Posts: 1601
Joined: Sep. 2005 |
 |
Posted: Mar. 11 2007,14:04 |
 |
I tried Felson's suggested commands below to convert a couple of unc extensions to dsl (thanks again):
Code Sample | cd ~dsl/ mkdir tmp cd tmp cp -rp /opt/package/* . du -a | awk '{print $2}' | sed "s/\.\///g" > package.lst [edit package.lst and remove any directories that aren't empty] tar -zcvf package.dsl -T package.lst mv package.dsl .. cd .. rm -rf tmp
|
If I use this on the Skype unc extension to make a dsl extension, then the file user.tar.gz is placed in the root directory. I assume the purpose of this is to add an icon to launch Skype - how do you go about doing this in a dsl extension, or perhaps more generally, is there a consistant way to treat the contents of user.tar.gz in general when going from unc --> dsl?
|