gramps/mac/launcher.sh
John Ralls 685021e146 Undo the rungramps changes.
Importing gramps at the end of rungramps causes threading deadlocks because of a lock (held by the main thread as long as Gramps is running) on import.

svn: r17705
2011-06-07 15:53:19 +00:00

170 lines
6.0 KiB
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#!/bin/sh
name="`basename $0`"
tmp="`pwd`/$0"
tmp=`dirname "$tmp"`
tmp=`dirname "$tmp"`
bundle=`dirname "$tmp"`
bundle_contents="$bundle"/Contents
bundle_res="$bundle_contents"/Resources
bundle_lib="$bundle_res"/lib
bundle_bin="$bundle_res"/bin
bundle_data="$bundle_res"/share
bundle_etc="$bundle_res"/etc
export XDG_DATA_DIRS="$bundle_data"
export DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH="$bundle_lib"
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH="$DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH"
export GTK_DATA_PREFIX="$bundle_res"
export GTK_EXE_PREFIX="$bundle_res"
export GTK_PATH="$bundle_res"
export GTK2_RC_FILES="$bundle_etc/gtk-2.0/gtkrc"
export GTK_IM_MODULE_FILE="$bundle_etc/gtk-2.0/gtk.immodules"
export GDK_PIXBUF_MODULE_FILE="$bundle_etc/gtk-2.0/gdk-pixbuf.loaders"
export PANGO_RC_FILE="$bundle_etc/pango/pangorc"
#Set $PYTHON to point inside the bundle
export PYTHON="$bundle_contents/MacOS/python"
#Add the bundle's python modules
PYTHONPATH="$bundle_lib/python2.6:$PYTHONPATH"
PYTHONPATH="$bundle_lib/python2.6/site-packages:$PYTHONPATH"
PYTHONPATH="$bundle_lib/python2.6/site-packages/gtk-2.0:$PYTHONPATH"
PYTHONPATH="$bundle_lib/python2.6/lib-dynload:$PYTHONPATH"
#Add our program's modules to $PYTHONPATH.
PYTHONPATH="$bundle_lib/pygtk/2.0:$PYTHONPATH"
export PYTHONPATH
export GRAMPSDIR="$bundle_data"/gramps
export GRAMPSI18N="$bundle_data"/locale
export GRAMPSHOME="$HOME/Library/Application Support"
# Set the locale-related variables appropriately:
unset LANG LC_MESSAGES LC_MONETARY
# Has a language ordering been set?
# If so, set LC_MESSAGES accordingly; otherwise skip it.
# Set the locale-related variables appropriately:
unset LANG LC_MESSAGES LC_MONETARY LC_COLLATE
# Has a language ordering been set?
# If so, set LC_MESSAGES and LANG accordingly; otherwise skip it.
# First step uses sed to clean off the quotes and commas, to change - to _, and change the names for the chinese scripts from "Hans" to CN and "Hant" to TW.
APPLELANGUAGES=`defaults read .GlobalPreferences AppleLanguages | sed -En -e 's/\-/_/' -e 's/Hant/TW/' -e 's/Hans/CN/' -e 's/[[:space:]]*\"?([[:alnum:]_]+)\"?,?/\1/p' `
if test "$APPLELANGUAGES"; then
# A language ordering exists.
# Test, item per item, to see whether there is an corresponding locale.
for L in $APPLELANGUAGES; do
#test for exact matches:
if test -f "$GRAMPSI18N/${L}/LC_MESSAGES/gramps.mo"; then
export LANG=$L
break
fi
#This is a special case, because often the original strings are in US
#English and there is no translation file.
if test "x$L" == "xen_US"; then
export LANG=$L
break
fi
#OK, now test for just the first two letters:
if test -f "$GRAMPSI18N/${L:0:2}/LC_MESSAGES/gramps.mo"; then
export LANG=${L:0:2}
break
fi
#Same thing, but checking for any english variant.
if test "x${L:0:2}" == "xen"; then
export LANG=$L
break
fi;
done
fi
unset APPLELANGUAGES L
# If we didn't get a language from the language list, try the Collation preference, in case it's the only setting that exists.
APPLECOLLATION=`defaults read .GlobalPreferences AppleCollationOrder`
if test -z "$LANG" -a -n "$APPLECOLLATION"; then
if test -f "$GRAMPSI18N/$APPLECOLLATION/LC_MESSAGES/gramps.mo"; then
export LANG=$APPLECOLLATION
fi
fi
if test -n "$APPLECOLLATION"; then
export LC_COLLATE=$APPLECOLLATION
fi
unset APPLECOLLATION
# Continue by attempting to find the Locale preference.
APPLELOCALE=`defaults read .GlobalPreferences AppleLocale`
if test -f "$GRAMPSI18N/${APPLELOCALE:0:5}/LC_MESSAGES/gramps.mo"; then
if test -z $LANG; then
export LANG="${APPLELOCALE:0:5}"
fi
elif test -z $LANG -a -f "$GRAMPSI18N/${APPLELOCALE:0:2}/LC_MESSAGES/gramps.mo"; then
export LANG="${APPLELOCALE:0:2}"
fi
#Next we need to set LC_MESSAGES. If at all possilbe, we want a full
#5-character locale to avoid the "Locale not supported by C library"
#warning from Gtk -- even though Gtk will translate with a
#two-character code.
if test -n $LANG; then
#If the language code matches the applelocale, then that's the message
#locale; otherwise, if it's longer than two characters, then it's
#probably a good message locale and we'll go with it.
if test $LANG == ${APPLELOCALE:0:5} -o $LANG != ${LANG:0:2}; then
export LC_MESSAGES=$LANG
#Next try if the Applelocale is longer than 2 chars and the language
#bit matches $LANG
elif test $LANG == ${APPLELOCALE:0:2} -a $APPLELOCALE > ${APPLELOCALE:0:2}; then
export LC_MESSAGES=${APPLELOCALE:0:5}
#Fail. Get a list of the locales in $PREFIX/share/locale that match
#our two letter language code and pick the first one, special casing
#english to set en_US
elif test $LANG == "en"; then
export LC_MESSAGES="en_US"
else
LOC=`find $PREFIX/share/locale -name $LANG???`
echo "Locales $LOC"
for L in $LOC; do
export LC_MESSAGES=$L
done
fi
else
#All efforts have failed, so default to US english
export LANG="en_US"
export LC_MESSAGES="en_US"
fi
CURRENCY=`echo $APPLELOCALE | sed -En 's/.*currency=([[:alpha:]]+).*/\1/p'`
if test "x$CURRENCY" != "x"; then
#The user has set a special currency. Gtk doesn't install LC_MONETARY files, but Apple does in /usr/share/locale, so we're going to look there for a locale to set LC_CURRENCY to.
if test -f /usr/local/share/$LC_MESSAGES/LC_MONETARY; then
if test -a `cat /usr/local/share/$LC_MESSAGES/LC_MONETARY` == $CURRENCY; then
export LC_MONETARY=$LC_MESSAGES
fi
fi
if test -z "$LC_MONETARY"; then
FILES=`find /usr/share/locale -name LC_MONETARY -exec grep -H $CURRENCY {} \;`
if test -n "$FILES"; then
export LC_MONETARY=`echo $FILES | sed -En 's%/usr/share/locale/([[:alpha:]_]+)/LC_MONETARY.*%\1%p'`
fi
fi
fi
#No currency value means that the AppleLocale governs:
if test -z "$LC_MONETARY"; then
export LC_MONETARY=${APPLELOCALE:0:5}
fi
#To turn on the appropriate dictionary:
export LC_ALL=$LC_MESSAGES
unset APPLELOCALE FILES LOC
# Strip out the argument added by the OS.
if [ x`echo "x$1" | sed -e "s/^x-psn_.*//"` == x ]; then
shift 1
fi
#Note that we're calling $PYTHON here to override the version in
#pygtk-demo's shebang.
exec $PYTHON -O "$GRAMPSDIR/gramps.py" "$@"