3e4ade1d85
This is revision for PR #423 not yet accepted. More user friendly, popup opens without click. Just mouse over. Reimported err file can be deleted if it still caused errors. --------- Commit #419 had errors in fAdifImport.lfm. I had cleaned it too much removing the popupmenu that should appear. Fixed. I do not know if I also cleaned btnClose onClick, but as also the pas file did not had btnCloseClick procedure it might have been missing for long. Now added btnCloseClick that sets boolean AbortEdit true. That stops long, or looping import. Using popup at error file name with selection adif import file caused a loop if error file was not completely fixed. If there was still error(s) they were added to error file that was the same as imported file. Endless loop. Now importing error file will create a new error file with different name. |
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docker-build | ||
help | ||
images | ||
members | ||
src | ||
tools | ||
voice_keyer | ||
xplanet | ||
zipcodes | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
AUTHORS | ||
CHANGELOG | ||
COPYING | ||
Makefile | ||
README.md |
What is CQRLOG?
CQRLOG is an advanced ham radio logger based on MySQL database. Provides radio control based on hamlib libraries (currently support of 140+ radio types and models), DX cluster connection, online callbook, a grayliner, internal QSL manager database support and a most accurate country resolution algorithm based on country tables developed by OK1RR. CQRLOG is intended for daily general logging of HF, CW & SSB contacts and strongly focused on easy operation and maintenance. More at https://www.cqrlog.com/
How to contribute?
You have to have Lazarus 2.0.6, fpc 3.0.4 compiler, MySQL server and clinet installed. CQRLOG is developed on Ubuntu 20.04, Lazarus and FreePascal are available in my pesronal repo https://launchpad.net/~ok2cqr/+archive/lazarus
Compile with make and install with make DESTDIR=/home/yourusername/where_you_want_to_have_it install. If you are going to change the source code, fork the repo, do the changes, commit them and use Pull request.
Dependencies
Build-Depends: lazarus, lcl, fp-utils, fp-units-misc, fp-units-gfx, fp-units-gtk2, fp-units-db, fp-units-math, fp-units-net
Depends: libssl-dev, mysql-server | mariadb-server, mysql-client | mariadb-client, libhamlib2 (>= 1.2.10), libhamlib-utils (>= 1.2.10)
Running build with Docker
If you do not want to install the dependencies into your main machine, you can do the build
in a Docker container. You need to mount into that Docker container this directory and
also the target directory where you want to put the alpha version of cqrlog
you are
building.
This also helps if you want to build, e.g., on a Debian Stretch machine. Attempts at native builds on that platform have failed. Using a reasonably recent Ubuntu inside our Docker-based build environment, makes the build work even on Debian Stretch.
That bad news is, you have to install Docker (CE is fine).
That done, you can prepare an Ubuntu Docker image with the build tools as follows:
(cd docker-build && docker build -t this.registry.is.invalid/cqrlog-build .)
(In case you wonder: There is no need to use a Docker registry, so we provide a registry host that is guaranteed to not exist.)
Then, run the build itself with
sudo mkdir -p /usr/local/cqrlog-alpha &&
docker run -ti -u root -v $(pwd):/home/cqrlog/build \
-v /usr/local/cqrlog-alpha:/usr/local/cqrlog-alpha this.registry.is.invalid/cqrlog-build
To use your build, make sure that you have no instance of cqrlog
running, backup
$HOME/.config/cqrlog
(if you ever used cqrlog
before), add
/usr/local/cqrlog-alpha/usr/bin
to your $PATH
and start cqrlog
from there.