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2d0e3e2e ER |
1 | %define snap 20080528 |
2 | Summary: A simple cross platform web browser | |
3 | Name: arora | |
4 | Version: 0.2 | |
5 | Release: 0.1 | |
6 | License: GPL v2 | |
7 | Group: X11/Applications/Networking | |
8 | Source0: %{name}-20080528.tar.bz2 | |
9 | # Source0-md5: a5f1c6df366748bf8e6f556e12f220d1 | |
10 | URL: http://code.google.com/p/arora/ | |
93dc58cf ER |
11 | BuildRequires: QtWebKit-devel |
12 | BuildRequires: qt4-qmake >= 4.4 | |
2d0e3e2e ER |
13 | BuildRoot: %{tmpdir}/%{name}-%{version}-root-%(id -u -n) |
14 | ||
15 | %description | |
16 | Arora was originally created as a demo for Qt to help test the | |
17 | QtWebKit component and find API issues and bugs before the release. An | |
18 | older version can still be found in Qt's source code in the | |
19 | demo/browser directory. Currently Arora is a very basic browser whose | |
20 | feature list includes things like "History" and "Bookmarks". It does | |
21 | not have support for netscape plugins, so no flash support until Qt | |
22 | 4.5. But it is small, less then 10,000 lines of code, very fast, lean, | |
23 | mean and loads of fun to hack on. | |
24 | ||
25 | %prep | |
26 | %setup -q -n %{name} | |
27 | ||
28 | %build | |
622ea0b2 | 29 | export QTDIR=/usr |
93dc58cf | 30 | qmake-qt4 |
2d0e3e2e ER |
31 | %{__make} |
32 | ||
33 | %install | |
34 | rm -rf $RPM_BUILD_ROOT | |
35 | %{__make} install \ | |
622ea0b2 | 36 | INSTALL_ROOT=$RPM_BUILD_ROOT |
2d0e3e2e ER |
37 | |
38 | %clean | |
39 | rm -rf $RPM_BUILD_ROOT | |
40 | ||
41 | %files | |
42 | %defattr(644,root,root,755) | |
43 | %doc README ChangeLog |