![]() ![]() none requiredĬhecking how to call gettimeofday. yesĬhecking for library containing opendir. yesĬhecking for dirent.h that defines DIR. yesĬhecking for sys/wait.h that is POSIX.1 compatible. voidĬhecking whether time.h and sys/time.h may both be included. bin/grepĬhecking return type of signal handlers. yesĬhecking for grep that handles long lines and -e. usr/bin/install -cĬhecking whether "$ -d" creates intermediate directories. yesĬhecking for a BSD-compatible install. gcc -pedantic -Wall -Wstrict-prototypes -Wnested-externs -Wmissing-prototypes -Wno-overlength-strings -Wdeclaration-after-statement -std=c89 -U_STRICT_ANSI_ -EĬhecking for an ANSI C-conforming const. yesĬhecking how to run the C preprocessor. yesĬhecking whether gcc accepts -no-cpp-precomp. yesĬhecking whether gcc accepts -Wdeclaration-after-statement. yesĬhecking whether gcc accepts -Wno-overlength-strings. noĬhecking whether the compiler works on ANSI C. PTHREAD_CREATE_JOINABLEĬhecking if more special flags are required for pthreads. yesĬhecking for joinable pthread attribute. noĬhecking whether pthreads work with -pthread. noĬhecking for the pthreads library -llthread. noĬhecking whether pthreads work with -kthread. noĬhecking whether pthreads work with -Kthread. noĬhecking whether pthreads work without any flags. noĬhecking for the pthreads library -lpthreads. none neededĬhecking if compiler needs -Werror to reject unknown flags. yesĬhecking for gcc option to accept ISO C89. noĬhecking whether we are using the GNU C compiler. a.outĬhecking whether we are cross compiling. ![]() ![]() yesĬhecking for C compiler default output file name. x86_64-unknown-linux-gnuĬhecking whether the C compiler works. x86_64-unknown-linux-gnuĬhecking host system type. Its a tiny thing in the scheme of things, I suppose: but KDE doesnt ship with any screensavers at all, and although one can always install the xscreensaver.Current directory: /home/ubuntu/Desktop/xscreensaver-5.34Ĭhecking build system type. unique situations going on with his systems. installColormap (class Boolean) On PseudoColor (8-bit) displays, install a private colormap while the screensaver is active, so that the graphics hacks can get. refined technical needs and who enjoys wasting cycles generating random screensavers. Am a particular fan of all of those extras from the extra packs. My question concerns the StarWars one which I would like to configure with something funny. The problem I am experimenting is that I am unable to locate how/where to setup this value. ![]() My first reflex as a user was to check under Screensaver and select StarWars which would give me a button to write something in. This package needs a new maintainer If you are interested in helping with the maintenance of xscreensaver, please get in touch with our Proxy Maintainers. I actually found 1 post from 2010 referring to the actual xscreensaver config hinting to bypass it via ~/.xscreensaver I then (of course) used some engines but didn't found anything relevant in terms of xscreensaver-text. So, oh dear Community, HOW in 2019 does one customizes the text under the StarWars screensaver? Same with the xscreensaver package for that matter ( which xscreensaver outputs nothing). Ii xscreensaver-gl-extra 5.36-1ubuntu1 amd64 Extra GL(Mesa) screen saver modules for screensaver frontends Ii xscreensaver-gl 5.36-1ubuntu1 amd64 GL(Mesa) screen saver modules for screensaver frontends To explain this differently, if a user has the following packaged installed: $ sudo dpkg -l | grep -i xscreensaver So the original problem is that even though we can have/see/use the StarWars screensaver without having to installl the xscreensaver package that we will be unable to customize the displayed text from it. Now, the (minor) problem one will then have, using UM 18.10, is that after the xscreensaver has been deployed: $ which xscreensaver-demo Then they can use/see the StarWars under MATE -> screensaver and they will be unable to customize it unless they also install the package xscreensaver. if you use kdes screensavers, you can setup Xscreensavers by running xscreensaver-demo. Is that (yes we can then launch it and use it per the above screenshot) we will end up with a duplicate Screensaver under in the UM menu. How to install a screensaver Fire up a new terminal like shown in Figure 1. Not sure how this should be handled next. Figure 1 Before installing a new screensaver we have to remove the default one. Run the ‘sudo apt-get remove gnome-screensaver’ command shown in Figure 2 to uninstall gnome-screensaver. Oh well, at least I can now change whatever is written under my screensaver. ![]()
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