SeaMonkey 'portables' - 32- and 64-bit - will now update internally...

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Re: SeaMonkey 'portables' - 32- and 64-bit - v2.53.11

Post by mikewalsh »

@xenial / @gilles :-

Erm.....I don't quite get that. I have two GMX a/cs, and both work just fine in SeaMonkey.....after the hassle of setting-up all the config stuff manually. (T-Bird does spoil you in this respect - and I definitely prefer it! - but SeaMonkey certainly gets the job done with e-mail).

Are all the server settings correct? This does take some faffing-about with if, like me, you're more used to Thunderbird....

Mike. ;)

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Re: SeaMonkey 'portables' - 32- and 64-bit - v2.53.8

Post by MochiMoppel »

mikewalsh wrote: Wed Mar 16, 2022 3:15 pm

As always; d/l; unzip; move the portable's directory anywhere you like outside the save....../mnt/home is a good choice, or you can run these from a flash drive, or other external drive/partition.

Hi @mikewalsh , you keep repeating this standard install instruction in all of your builds.
I'd love to put your apps "outside the save" onto the USB stick where I keep my Puppies and data. Problem: Like all off-the-shelf USB sticks it is FAT32 formatted (and I have no compelling reason to change that), however many of your "portables" contain symlinks, which are not supported on FAT32 formatted drives. So in cases your "portables" will not work on FAT32 drives/partitions would it be possible for you to add a remark/warning?

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Re: SeaMonkey 'portables' - 32- and 64-bit - v2.53.11

Post by gilles »

mikewalsh wrote: Fri Nov 25, 2022 12:42 am

@xenial / @gilles :-

after the hassle of setting-up all the config stuff manually. (T-Bird does spoil you in this respect - and I definitely prefer it! - but SeaMonkey certainly gets the job done with e-mail).

Morning,

"The hassle of setting-up all the config stuff manually" ????? With all others browsers I have only to click on "log in"... But with seamonkey it opens nothing...
It looks to be "why doing simple when it could be done a more complicated way?"....

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Re: SeaMonkey 'portables' - 32- and 64-bit - v2.53.11

Post by mikewalsh »

@MochiMoppel :-

Hello, Mochi.

I'd love to put your apps "outside the save" onto the USB stick where I keep my Puppies and data. Problem: Like all off-the-shelf USB sticks it is FAT32 formatted (and I have no compelling reason to change that), however many of your "portables" contain symlinks, which are not supported on FAT32 formatted drives.

Mm-hm. Fred mentioned this to me about FAT32 in the early days of portable-building. Since when, I've been careful not to use sym-links in the actual builds. But then, of course, I go and spoil all that by performing what I remember you called "sym-link gymnastics" (!! :lol:) with the configuration files & stuff.

It's possible to keep everything in-situ with most browser builds, since the means to do so has been in the public domain for many years, and what we do only builds upon the past efforts of others. These are easy enough to do, because they possess the ability to specify the location of their profile/cache.

However, many other applications I turn into portables - I believe - must have the "destinations" for their config files 'hard-coded' into the main binaries. I've tried applying the same kind of workarounds to keep everything in-house with a number of these, yet they turn their noses up at this & still locate stuff where they want it to go. Hence why I developed the "gymnastics". (I think the workaround you discovered for the SoftMaker FreeOffice suite - that of being able to keep the config files within the app's own directory - was somewhat unique. I've not been able to find similar workarounds/instructions for other apps.)

Most apps usually look to put config stuff somewhere in the user's $HOME directory (because of the usual Linux restricted-permissions, multi-user model that is expected). They'll either put it directly in $HOME, OR $HOME/.config. Some will even use $HOME/.local/share, or any combination of these three.

---------------------------

I'm wondering, now. Would you mind if I "picked your brains".....to coin a phrase?

You've proved, time and again on the forums, that you have a fairly extensive understanding of how Bash and many Linux commands work. I don't mind admitting, mine is pretty basic by comparison.

I've been thinking about an alternate way of doing the above "gymnastics". I'm wondering if there might be any way in which a portable app could be made to think that a sub-directory - within its own directory - was the user's $HOME directory rather than needing to search the system to find it.

In other words, convince it to create its configuration directories/files within a pseudo-$HOME directory instead of looking for the "real" $HOME directory. What's your opinion? Is there a way it could be done? Is it even 'do-able'?

I appreciate this isn't what your post was about.....but it's led to this "request", since I've been thinking about this for a long while, on & off. I don't mind asking for assistance, because I certainly DON'T 'know it all'. Far from it.... :oops:

Mike. ;)

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Re: SeaMonkey 'portables' - 32- and 64-bit - v2.53.11

Post by mikewalsh »

gilles wrote: Fri Nov 25, 2022 11:50 am
mikewalsh wrote: Fri Nov 25, 2022 12:42 am

@xenial / @gilles :-

after the hassle of setting-up all the config stuff manually. (T-Bird does spoil you in this respect - and I definitely prefer it! - but SeaMonkey certainly gets the job done with e-mail).

Morning,

"The hassle of setting-up all the config stuff manually" ????? With all others browsers I have only to click on "log in"... But with seamonkey it opens nothing...
It looks to be "why doing simple when it could be done a more complicated way?"....

@gilles :-

Um; I wasn't talking about logging-in in the browser. I was specifically referring to the fact that Thunderbird sets-up all the email server-side stuff for you, whereas SeaMonkey's Mail client requires the user to enter all the server settings manually.

Perhaps I misunderstood. Ah. My mistake. You're not talking about SeaMonkey's mail client; you're talking about accessing GMX through the webmail app, aren't you?

LATER:- Huh. Seems you're right. In SeaMonkey, you cannot 'log-in' to GMX webmail at all.....because the log-in form simply doesn't show. I wasn't aware of this, because in SeaMonkey I always use the Mail Client itself......it's about the only browser where I've never bothered with webmail. Never seemed any point, since the built-in mail client is a part of SeaMonkey itself......and I've always preferred email clients to webmail.

Mike. :o

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Re: SeaMonkey 'portables' - 32- and 64-bit - v2.53.11

Post by gilles »

mikewalsh wrote: Fri Nov 25, 2022 12:42 am

Perhaps I misunderstood. Ah. My mistake. You're not talking about SeaMonkey's mail client; you're talking about accessing GMX through the webmail app, aren't you?

Yes I am !

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Re: SeaMonkey 'portables' - 32- and 64-bit - v2.53.11

Post by MochiMoppel »

@mikewalsh You didn't answer my question.
To illustrate my problem again I downloaded your Pale Moon "portable", expanded it in the /root/Downloads folder and ran LAUNCH. It works.
I then copied the PaleMoon folder to /mnt/home, ran LAUNCH, and it doesn't work. It can't work because your build includes a glibc228 folder This folder originally contains many symlinks, all of which die on their way to a FAT32 stick. The result is an unusable 'portable', hence my request to include a warning for your unsuspecting users.

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Re: SeaMonkey 'portables' - 32- and 64-bit - v2.53.11

Post by mikewalsh »

@MochiMoppel :-

Hallo again, Mochi.

Now; a "warning" may not be needed, after all. I've done some re-building of the 'glibc-228' directory, to remove all sym-links; basically, all libraries have been re-named to their "link" equivalents, and the corresponding links removed. (Most of the re-naming was straight-forward; however, I wasn't at all certain about duplicating "ld-2.28.so", re-naming it to "ld-linux.so.2" and then substituting it for the sym-link of the same name, but - touch wood - it doesn't appear to be misbehaving itself.)

Posting this from the current, v31.4.0 32-bit Pale Moon 'portable', running on a 16 GB, SanDisk Cruzer 'Glide' FAT32-formatted flash drive.

-----------------------------

If you'd like to give this a try, you can find it here:-

https://mega.nz/folder/CTIg2TAA#c3g08IWHY4ZBiGbljpEGpA

I've labelled it as a 'FAT32' build just for now. It's running A-OK for me here - YouTube and the Beeb's iPlayer are quite happy - but I shan't label it differently until it's been tested by others, specifically running from a FAT32 stick. If you're happy with this, I can use this 'experiment' as a guideline for building other portables in future, bearing in mind what you've said here. :)

Let me know if this works for you, please. The 'Menu-entry' option won't work, of course; although the .desktop file & icon are only copied (then deleted when removed), there's a single sym-link from 'LAUNCH' to /usr/bin/palemoon.....so that option IS untenable. It'll still run fine from the 'LAUNCH' script in purely 'portable' mode, of course, which is, I believe, how most people will use it.

I'll need to mention - for future builds - that the MenuEntry option won't work if running from FAT32, that's all.

EDIT:- I may have spoken too soon! It's perfectly happy running from FAT32 in Xenialpup 7.5. Running like this under Slacko 5.6.0, however, is a different story. Massive amounts of artifacting; videos show up in only certain 'negative' colour combinations.....even trying to write a post for these forums, as soon as you click on the 'Editor' window, everything disappears... :roll:

(This may be due to my Nvidia GPU, and having to run the nouveau driver here. The Nvidia .run file won't compile for me, 'cos this 560 is very much a Frankenpup.....nothing standard about it at all; DPup Stretch kernel, glibc 2.20 'upgrade', various EFI bits filched from Tahrpup 6.0.6 ( had to do this to get it to run on this HP desktop rig, because it normally stalls at "can't find VESA BIOS extensions" - this is a UEFI machine, y'see)). :?

Mike. ;)

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Re: SeaMonkey 'portables' - 32- and 64-bit - v2.53.11

Post by williams2 »

You should be able to create a file on a fat32 or ntfs file system
and format the file to contain an ext3 or ext4 file system.

In other words, a duplicate save file, just for portable apps, if you like.

For example, I created a 512MB file on /mnt/home/ named save3
I formatted save3 with an ext3 vfile system
Then I mounted the file system in the save3 file on /mnt/dave4/
Then I copied the extracted files of Opera-portable 92.0.4561.33 to /mnt/dave4/
(poor choice of file names)

Like this:

Code: Select all

# cd /mnt/home/
# dd if=/dev/zero of=/mnt/home/save3 bs=1M count=512
#
# mkfs.ext3 /mnt/home/save3 
#
# mkdir /mnt/dave4
# mount-FULL -o loop /mnt/home/save3 /mnt/dave4/

then clicking the LAUNCH button ...

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Re: SeaMonkey 'portables' - 32- and 64-bit - v2.53.11

Post by MochiMoppel »

mikewalsh wrote: Sun Nov 27, 2022 3:31 am

I've labelled it as a 'FAT32' build just for now. It's running A-OK for me here - YouTube and the Beeb's iPlayer are quite happy

YouTube looks good. Don't know anything about iPlayer but overall impression is good - so far :lol:

The 'Menu-entry' option won't work, of course;

What is the 'Menu-entry' option? The Menu-Add and Menu-Remove scripts work as expected. Tip: If you replace jwm -restart with jwm -reload you can avoid screen flicker since JWM doesn't need to redraw the screen when only menu entries change

there's a single sym-link from 'LAUNCH' to /usr/bin/palemoon.....so that option IS untenable.

The other way round. It's a sym-link to LAUNCH (on FAT32). That's not a problem and it works. You can always link to FAT32, however you can't link within or from FAT32

Running like this under Slacko 5.6.0, however, is a different story. Massive amounts of artifacting; videos show up in only certain 'negative' colour combinations.....even trying to write a post for these forums

Can't confirm. Seems to run nicely in Slacko 5.6.0. I'm now posting from it. If you have problems then I assume that the problems occur no matter if your target partition is FAT32 or ext.

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Re: SeaMonkey 'portables' - 32- and 64-bit - currently at v2.53.14

Post by mikewalsh »

@MochiMoppel :-

Mm-hm. Yes, strictly speaking you're right; the sym-link is in /usr/bin, therefore on an ext format. Thanks for the info, BTW; I wasn't aware that sym-links would work at all with FAT32!

MochiMoppel wrote: Sun Nov 27, 2022 10:27 am

Running like this under Slacko 5.6.0, however, is a different story. Massive amounts of artifacting; videos show up in only certain 'negative' colour combinations.....even trying to write a post for these forums

Can't confirm. Seems to run nicely in Slacko 5.6.0. I'm now posting from it. If you have problems then I assume that the problems occur no matter if your target partition is FAT32 or ext.

Uh-huh. Yes, in my case it has nothing to do with format. My Slacko 5.6.0 is a bastardised "Frankenpup" of biblical proportions, unfortunately. It has stuff from DPup Stretch & Tahrpup, battleshooter's 'glibc-2.20' upgrade, and much of what it runs is from a Xenialpup chroot. And it's all due to the fact that a pristine Slacko 5.6.0 simply will not boot on this UEFI machine. It invariably stalls at "can't find VESA BIOS extensions".....for the simple reason it doesn't HAVE a BIOS. It uses UEFI instead.

It was always my favourite 32-bit Puppy when I had the old Compaq desktop, but things didn't behave themselves at all when I tried running it on this new machine. Hence the Mary Shelley treatment! :lol:

---------------------------------------------

This re-built version of Pale Moon is perfectly happy on the FAT32 stick under any other 32-bit Puppy. It's JUST my beloved Slacko 560....(grrr!) :roll:

I'll see about using this technique with some of the other portable builds over the next few months. Thanks for testing.....AND for the tip about

Code: Select all

jwm -reload

I'll give that a try. Cheers! :thumbup:

Mike. ;)

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Re: SeaMonkey 'portables' - 32- and 64-bit - v2.53.11

Post by MochiMoppel »

mikewalsh wrote: Fri Nov 25, 2022 5:43 pm

I'm wondering if there might be any way in which a portable app could be made to think that a sub-directory - within its own directory - was the user's $HOME directory rather than needing to search the system to find it.

In other words, convince it to create its configuration directories/files within a pseudo-$HOME directory instead of looking for the "real" $HOME directory. What's your opinion? Is there a way it could be done? Is it even 'do-able'?

Yes, it's 'do-able.'


###### ORIGINAL OFF TOPIC REPLY ########
In principle it's possible and in case of Pale Moon it's very easy. You may delete the mkdir command, and if you do that you must remove the trailing -profile argument from your main command. Somewhere before your main command add HOME=$HERE. Pale Moon will add the directories Desktop, .moonchild productions (containing the profile) and .mozilla to your LAUNCH directory. You can even go further and let Pale Moon create its cache in the LAUNCH directory, which may be a good way to avoid running out of available memory and also to avoid leaving any traces on the host computer.
But I wonder if this thread is the right place to discuss such exercises. Do you have a thread for discussing the general concept of your 'portable' stuff?

One more thing: Your LAUCH script will fail if the path of your Pale Moon directory ($HERE) contains spaces. While some of your double quotations are not really needed (but hey, the rule is: use them when in doubt), they are essential in your main command:
"$HERE"/glibc228/lib/ld-linux.so.2 --library-path "$HERE"/glibc228/lib:"$HERE"/glibc228/usr/lib:"$HERE"/glibc228/libstdc++:/usr/X11R7/lib:"$HERE" "$HERE"/palemoon32/palemoon "$@" -profile "$HERE/profile"

or maybe easier to read

"$HERE/glibc228/lib/ld-linux.so.2" --library-path "$HERE/glibc228/lib:$HERE/glibc228/usr/lib:$HERE/glibc228/libstdc++:/usr/X11R7/lib:$HERE" "$HERE/palemoon32/palemoon" "$@" -profile "$HERE/profile"

[EDIT] I now tried some of your 32bit Firefox 'portables' in Slacko 5.6. None of them works. Therefore another request: Could you please indicate in your browser threads, in which distros the builds were tested and expected to work?

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Re: SeaMonkey 'portables' - 32- and 64-bit - currently at v2.53.14

Post by Fenyo »

Hello and Happy Easter Wishes for all of us, here are some retro builds;

- 2.53.16 3DNow - usually cpus that have 3dnow, but lack cmov instruction set ( so Amd K6-x series (k6-2/k6-2+/k6-3/k6-3+, Geode LX, some Via cpus (C3 Samuel 2 and C3 Ezra are the target cpus, but also works with classic Athlon/Duron), built under Debian 8 (the latest distro with i586 support) with gcc-7 which is required to run under Debian 8/9, under Debian 10/11 based distros run by out of the box. Of course it works with other 3dnow capable cpus on Debian 8 or newer 32bit Debian based distros, but this is only relevant for low-end low-clock Duron/Athlon configurations with low amount of memory, because it will probably run faster than IA32 builds. all past and future builds will be available here

- 2.53.16 IA32 - usually cpus that have cmov, but lack sse instruction set) like Pentium Pro, PII (and Mendocino Celeron), Athlon (from Argon to Thunderbird), Duron (Spitfire), built under Debian 8 with gcc-7 which is required to run under Debian 8/9, under Debian 10/11 based distros run by out of the box. all past and future builds will be available here

- 2.53.16 SSE - sse required (PIII and Celeron derivates (Katmai, Coppermine, Tualatin), Athlon Xp/K7 based Sempron/Geode NX or Morgan core or newer Duron), Via C3 Nehemiah, minimum glibc 2.19 required, Debian 8 (Jessie or hihger supported), built under Debian 8 with gcc-7 which is required to run under Debian 8/9, under Debian 10/11 based distros run by out of the box. all past and future builds will be available here

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Re: Re-built SeaMonkey 'portables' - 32- and 64-bit - will now update internally...

Post by mikewalsh »

Evening, gang.

Taking inspiration from dogcat's set of Menu entries for the individual components within Seamonkey, I've re-worked the portable build of SeaMonkey.

The portable has been re-packed as a ROX-app. When you first get it, click on the directory to launch SeaMonkey, and you'll now see this 'multi-launcher':-

Image

This allows you to launch the full suite - as normal - permitting use of the browser. Alternatively, you can instantly launch any of the 'components' of SeaMonkey. You can also add or remove the Menu entry from here, too.

The only time you will need to launch direct from the ROX-app is the first time, prior to adding a menu entry if you want one. The usual advice still applies; if you move the ROX-app, remove the menu entry first, then you can move the app itself. Then, re-add the Menu entry again.......because the $PATH will have changed, too.

If you wish to continue to use SeaMonkey purely AS a 'portable', the multi-launcher still gives instant access to any component.

========================

As always:-

  • Download

  • Unzip

  • Move the portable anywhere you like - preferably OUTSIDE the 'save'

  • Click to fire it up!

The re-built packages are now available from the new link in post #1. Enjoy!

Mike. ;)

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