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Hans de Goede 08490fed8a themes: Move spinifity from the throbgress splash to the two-step splash
At one point in time the two-step splash plugin was forked from the
throbgress splash. Since then the two-step plugin has grown to be more
flexible / configurable.

The two-step plugin is now flexible enough that with the right config
it can mimick the throbgress plugin. Moving the spinifity theme to
use the two-step plugin allows us to remove the throbgress plugin,
removing the code duplication between the 2 plugins.

An added advantage of this is that the two-step plugin has more functionality,
such as capslock indicator support for the password dialog.

Note the throbber-??.png images were modified to add 24 transparant rows at
the top, to get the extra hardcoded throbber-height / 2 space which the
throbgress plugin added between the throbber and the header-image, this
was done automatically using the following command:
convert old.png -background transparent -gravity northwest -splice 0x24 new.png

Signed-off-by: Hans de Goede <hdegoede@redhat.com>
2019-09-27 09:36:51 +02:00
docs docs: fix some typos 2018-06-06 13:29:09 -04:00
images ship bizcom unconditionally 2008-06-22 00:49:24 -04:00
po Translations: Sync l10n.gnome.org's translation. 2019-09-10 02:24:46 +00:00
scripts scripts: update file plymouth.spec to integrate recent fixes. 2019-09-04 07:25:15 +00:00
src two-step: Add new UseAnimation setting 2019-09-27 09:36:51 +02:00
systemd-units Revert "Merge branch 'avoid_shutdown_failure_v2' into 'master'" 2019-09-06 10:17:07 +00:00
themes themes: Move spinifity from the throbgress splash to the two-step splash 2019-09-27 09:36:51 +02:00
.gitignore .gitignore: ignore generated manpages 2014-06-26 10:42:45 +02:00
acinclude.m4 [configure] Add AS_AC_EXPAND for configured dirs 2009-08-07 16:32:32 -04:00
AUTHORS Add Peter to AUTHORS 2008-06-10 21:59:10 -04:00
autogen.sh build-goo: get rid of warnings related to non-GNU systems 2013-12-11 13:32:54 -05:00
ChangeLog Put in ChangeLog request to not use ChangeLog 2008-05-20 15:15:03 -04:00
configure.ac configure: bump so name 2019-07-15 10:51:54 -04:00
COPYING initial import 2007-05-08 17:48:00 -04:00
INSTALL INSTALL: Fix a spelling error in the command example 2017-11-30 09:10:46 -05:00
Makefile.am Add support for translating the user visible strings in some themes 2019-02-26 17:05:14 +01:00
NEWS initial import 2007-05-08 17:48:00 -04:00
README README: add link to Code of Conduct 2018-08-06 14:58:18 -04:00
TODO Add hack to make maintenance mode probably work when 2008-06-30 17:55:15 -04:00

plymouth - graphical boot animation and logger

Plymouth is an application that runs very early in the boot process
(even before the root filesystem is mounted!) that provides a graphical
boot animation while the boot process happens in the background.

It is designed to work on systems with DRM modesetting drivers. The idea
is that early on in the boot process the native mode for the computer is
set, plymouth uses that mode, and that mode stays throughout the entire
boot process up to and after X starts. Ideally, the goal is to get rid
of all flicker during startup.

For systems that don't have DRM mode settings drivers, plymouth falls
back to text mode (it can also use a legacy /dev/fb interface).

In either text or graphics mode, the boot messages are completely
occluded.  After the root file system is mounted read-write, the
messages are dumped to /var/log/boot.log. Also, the user can see the
messages at any time during boot up by hitting the escape key.

Plymouth isn't really designed to be built from source by end users. For
it to work correctly, it needs integration with the distribution.
Because it starts so early, it needs to be packed into the
distribution's initial ram disk, and the distribution needs to poke
plymouth to tell it how boot is progressing.

plymouth ships with two binaries: /sbin/plymouthd and /bin/plymouth

The first one, plymouthd, does all the heavy lifting. It logs the
session and shows the splash screen. The second one, /bin/plymouth, is
the control interface to plymouthd.

It supports things like plymouth show-splash, or plymouth
ask-for-password, which trigger the associated action in plymouthd.

Plymouth supports various "splash" themes which are analogous to
screensavers, but happen at boot time. There are several sample themes
shipped with plymouth, but most distributions that use plymouth ship
something customized for their distribution.

Plymouth isn't done yet. It's still under active development, but is
used in several popular distros already, including Fedora, Mandriva,
Ubuntu and others.  See the distributions page for more information.

As with other projects hosted on freedesktop.org, Plymouth follows its
Code of Conduct, based on the Contributor Covenant. Please conduct
yourself in a respectful and civilized manner when using the above
mailing lists, bug trackers, etc:

	https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/CodeOfConduct