Antonio Larrosa
alarrosa
- gnome-maintainers 4 tasks
- opensuse-review-team 28 tasks
Involved Projects and Packages
libblockdev is a C library supporting GObject introspection for manipulation of block devices. It has a plugin-based architecture where each technology (like LVM, Btrfs, MD RAID, Swap,...) is implemented in a separate plugin, possibly with multiple implementations (e.g. using LVM CLI or the new LVM DBus API).
The LibBytesize is a C library that facilitates work with sizes in
bytes. Be it parsing the input from users or producing a nice human readable
representation of a size in bytes this library takes localization into
account. It also provides support for sizes bigger than MAXUINT64.
NOTE: Automatically created during Factory devel project migration by admin.
This project contains no software, but it defines the admins for the GNOME: project group.
This project contains the latest version of various GNOME applications. It can be used on stable versions of openSUSE to get newer versions of packages, but it has to be noted that the main aim of this project is to create package for Factory.
If you're interested in maintainership of this project, feel free to send a mail to opensuse-gnome@opensuse.org, or join either the #opensuse-gnome IRC room on Libera Chat or the "openSUSE GNOME" (https://matrix.to/#/#gnome:opensuse.org) Matrix/Discord room.
GNOME:Backports:X.YY contains packages required to build new versions of GNOME for released versions of openSUSE
The stable development branch of GNOME packages.
If you're interested in helping maintain the GNOME Stack in openSUSE, please join the fun in either #opensuse-gnome IRC room, on Libera Chat, or "openSUSE GNOME" Matrix/Discord room. There is surely some task ready for you.
THIS PROJECT IS DISCONTINUED; YOU SHOULD NOT USE IT.
This project contains libraries and applications from the deprecated GTK+1 and GNOME1 projects.
Status: Packages which still exist in OpenSuSE FACTORY are linked there. The rest is present only here and anybody is encouraged to add or fix them.
This project builds Live CD images and USB stick images based with GNOME Desktops.
Where the regular development snapshots of the GNOME project are being published. Bear in mind it can get quite unstable at times and even render systems to a unusable state, so if you don't use Snapper you have to at least know basic troubleshooting/recovery techniques.
In order to make use of this project, the user MUST have Tumbleweed repositories enabled (and/or openSUSE:Factory ones, if you know what you're doing); this is the only semi-tested and semi-supported solution.
Note that having any "stable" release repos (like openSUSE Leap) is NOT supported, and will break your system and harm some random kitten.
If you encounter issues, please contact the gnome-team on #opensuse-gnome on irc.opensuse.org
or https://matrix.to/#/#gnome:opensuse.org
Not unlikely, you will be asked to open an issue on gitlab.gnome.org or file a bug at bugzilla.opensuse.org (preferably with upstream directly).
NOTE:
If you want to use this repo, please make sure that you do zypper dup --from GNOME:Next (or whatever name you elected to the repo), to ensure that you pull in everything that is needed from here.
This is the stable release of GNOME 3.12 for openSUSE 13.1.
This is the stable release of GNOME 3.16.x for openSUSE 13.2.
The project is tracing gnome 41 (starting from gnome 40 release)
The project is tracing gnome 41 (starting from gnome 40 release)
Shotwell is a digital photo organizer designed for the GNOME desktop
environment. It allows you to import photos from disk or camera,
organize them in various ways, view them in full-window or fullscreen
mode, and export them to share with others.
This is a rename of project ddctool.
ddcutil is a program for querying and changing monitor settings, such as brightness and color levels.
ddcutil primarily uses DDC/CI (Display Data Channel Command Interface) over I2C to communicate with monitors implementing MCCS (Monitor Control Command Set). Normally, the video driver for the monitor exposes the I2C channel as devices named /dev/i2c-n. Alternatively, there is initial support for monitors (such as Apple displays) that implement MCCS using a USB connection.
A particular use case for ddcutil is as part of color profile management. Monitor calibration is relative to the monitor color settings currently in effect, e.g. red gain. ddctool allows color related settings to be saved at the time a monitor is calibrated, and then restored when the calibration is applied.
Detailed documentation for ddcutil can be found at www.ddcutil.com.
This proxy reads sensor data from the IIO subsystem and serves to the input subsystem