Wrench
From Openmoko
(Difference between revisions)
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Now you should be able to use this tool from SSH connection | Now you should be able to use this tool from SSH connection | ||
+ | |||
+ | == eet -- '''Way to change .cfg files''' == | ||
+ | |||
+ | I've got recently this mail from enlightenment mailing list: | ||
+ | |||
+ | you have to use "eet" command line utility, it is the tool that reads | ||
+ | .src and turns then into .cfg if you check out Makefile (and | ||
+ | Makefile.am). | ||
+ | |||
+ | eet -l e.cfg # list all keys, usually just "config" | ||
+ | eet -d e.cfg config e.src # writes human readable values to file e.src | ||
+ | $EDITOR e.src # change whatever you like | ||
+ | eet -e e.cfg config e.src 1 # compile human readable values to binary form and use compression | ||
+ | |||
+ | If you find that useful and want to help, please create a wiki page | ||
+ | with your new knowledge. | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | More complete instruction will appear tomorrow |
Revision as of 22:02, 5 January 2009
Steps and Tips about Wrench tool in ASU theme
enlightenment_remote
Wrench probably used utility enlightenment_remote
This tool is able to
- Load, Unload and List modules ( ENABLED = AUTOSTART, module must be LOADed before doing this )
- Restart enlightenment, reboot OM, logout from session
- Manage fonts, virtual desktops, winlist and process freeze detection&killing
- And a lot of less important (some not available on FR) functions
To use it from SSH you need to setup environment variable E_IPC_SOCKET. Because it points to a file, it isn't hard to locate it. Just do this:
ls /tmp/enlightenment-root
For reply "disp-:0.0-2166|0" do
NOTE: Don't forget to escape colon (":") and remove anything after pipe (" |
export E_IPC_SOCKET=/tmp/enlightenment-root/disp-\:0.0-2166
Now you should be able to use this tool from SSH connection
eet -- Way to change .cfg files
I've got recently this mail from enlightenment mailing list:
you have to use "eet" command line utility, it is the tool that reads .src and turns then into .cfg if you check out Makefile (and Makefile.am).
eet -l e.cfg # list all keys, usually just "config" eet -d e.cfg config e.src # writes human readable values to file e.src $EDITOR e.src # change whatever you like eet -e e.cfg config e.src 1 # compile human readable values to binary form and use compression
If you find that useful and want to help, please create a wiki page with your new knowledge.
More complete instruction will appear tomorrow