office-gobmx/distro-configs
Caolán McNamara ee93dfafdd drop disable-xmlsec, it's core functionality, have to live with it
we basically need this functionality, the idea of it being optional
isn't really logical anymore with nss split out from mozilla.

for iOS and Android where they doesn't build yet spit out lame fixme
nag warnings

Change-Id: I4b16c62553b12d3dcd340a0b5c5a4cbd807c2f02
2012-08-14 12:47:27 +01:00
..
LibreOfficeAndroid.conf drop disable-xmlsec, it's core functionality, have to live with it 2012-08-14 12:47:27 +01:00
LibreOfficeAndroidX86.conf drop disable-xmlsec, it's core functionality, have to live with it 2012-08-14 12:47:27 +01:00
LibreOfficeiOS.conf drop disable-xmlsec, it's core functionality, have to live with it 2012-08-14 12:47:27 +01:00
LibreOfficeLinux.conf gstreamer: make gstreamer 1.0 and 0.10 dual compile 2012-08-09 20:46:16 +01:00
LibreOfficeMacOSX.conf
LibreOfficeMinGW.conf
LibreOfficeOpenBSD.conf gstreamer: make gstreamer 1.0 and 0.10 dual compile 2012-08-09 20:46:16 +01:00
LibreOfficeWin32.conf
LibreOfficeWin64.conf
OxygenOfficeLinux.conf gstreamer: make gstreamer 1.0 and 0.10 dual compile 2012-08-09 20:46:16 +01:00
OxygenOfficeWin32.conf
README

Pre-canned distribution / platform configurations

When the software is configured for a platform, since we run on so
many platforms, detecting the best sequence of configure options to
get it building is hard.

Instead we have a text file containing the recommended (often the
distributed) version of these parameters, one per distribution or
significant platform. These are interpreted by autogen.sh and
eventually end up passed to configure. Thus:

./autogen.sh --with-distro=LibreOfficeAndroid

might build a version tweaked for Android.