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How to build new template packages for Prayer Webmail
=================================================

Prayer uses its own macro expansion language, which is documented in
TEMPLATES. The templates (filename extension .t) are first translated
into C code (actually no executable code, merely data structures),
which is then compiled to object form. Originally, the object files
had to be linked with the prayer executables, but as a Debian
extension they can be assembled in shared libraries and loaded
dynamically.

This package contains the programs and scripts needed to build
template libraries, as well as a makefile to facilitate the process.


template-set.make
-----------------

/usr/share/prayer/template-set.make can be used directly (via make -f)
or included from an ordinary Makefile.

The variable NAME defines the name of the template set. By default
it's set to the name of the current directory. NAME must be set on the
command line or *before* including template-set.make. An alternative
is to follow chapter 3.8 in the GNU Make documentation and _delegate_
certain or all targets to template-set.make:

  %: force
        @$(MAKE) -f /usr/share/prayer/template-set.make NAME=foobar
  force: ;

The variables TEMPLATES and TEMPLATES_FRONTEND list the top-level
templates that Prayer is known to use, and which should be defined
lest the user be met with a page saying nothing but "Template not
found". Unless all those templates are defined, or you redefine the
variables, the build will fail, but you can set VPATH to a directory
containing an existing template set to take the missing templates from
there. Just be sure that there are no intermediate files lying around!

Templates can call other templates by means of the CALL macro. They
are scanned recursively to make sure that all referenced templates are
included in the respective library.

A complete template package should consist of two libraries: one for
the session daemon and one for the front-end. The latter contains the
templates for the login screen and certain messages when no session
exists or none can be found, and since the users can't choose the
front-end template set it can be considered pretty much optional. To
skip building the front-end library, set TEMPLATE_LIBS = $(SESSION_LIB)
(also on the command line or before including template-set.make).


Installing
----------

To help build separate architecture-independent and architecture-
specific packages (as well as to avoid conflicts with the "install"
target you may want to use yourself), template-set.make provides two
install targets, "install-sources" and "install-libs", which do the
right thing. The standard DESTDIR variable is supported (instead of
BROOT, which is used in Prayer's own makefiles).


Images and CSS files
--------------------

This package contains no tools to organise static files. Those should
simply be installed in /usr/share/prayer/icons and
/usr/share/prayer/static. Note that Prayer doesn't support sub-
directories, so files should be named in a way that avoids conflicts.


 -- Magnus Holmgren <holmgren@debian.org>, Sun, 25 Oct 2009 18:36:44 +0100