Add an icon (in OSX parlance, a 'bundle') to the installation folder to start
I2P.  

While there might be a better way to handle this (admittedly, I don't know OSX
that well), it is my belief that this way is less 'hackish' than the various
OSX 'installers' that I've seen floating around.
This commit is contained in:
kytv
2011-06-23 10:18:19 +00:00
parent 67fd074f04
commit 5a64a866da
7 changed files with 72 additions and 2 deletions

View File

@@ -482,7 +482,7 @@
</delete>
</target>
<target name="preppkg" depends="preppkg-linux, preppkg-windows, jbigi">
<target name="preppkg" depends="preppkg-linux, preppkg-osx, preppkg-windows, jbigi">
<copy file="build/jbigi.jar" todir="pkg-temp/lib" />
<copy todir="pkg-temp/lib/wrapper/freebsd/">
<fileset dir="installer/lib/wrapper/freebsd/" />
@@ -546,6 +546,13 @@
</copy>
</target>
<target name="preppkg-osx" depends="preppkg-linux">
<!--<copy file="installer/resources/I2P Router Console.webloc" todir="pkg-temp/" />-->
<copy todir="pkg-temp/Start I2P Router.app">
<fileset dir="installer/resources/Start I2P Router.app" />
</copy>
</target>
<target name="preppkg-base" depends="build, preplicenses, prepConsoleDocs, prepthemeupdates, prepCertificates">
<!-- if updater200 was run previously, it left *.pack files in pkg-temp -->
<delete>