Difference between revisions of "Creating and Maintaining a Module Repository"
From CrossWire Bible Society
David Haslam (talk | contribs) (→Layout of a Module repository: a Gzipped file.) |
David Haslam (talk | contribs) (→Layout of a Module repository: [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gzip gzipped]) |
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Several front ends (particularly for small devices) do require modules in a different format though, as a zipped file. | Several front ends (particularly for small devices) do require modules in a different format though, as a zipped file. | ||
− | '''mods.d.tar.gz''' is a | + | '''mods.d.tar.gz''' is a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gzip gzipped] file. |
It is also helpful to people who have no access to direct internet connections to be able to download zipped modules. | It is also helpful to people who have no access to direct internet connections to be able to download zipped modules. |
Revision as of 10:40, 29 November 2008
Layout of a Module repository
A repository is an echo of the mods.d and modules area as found under any Sword module area on your system (e.g. ~/.sword) plus mods.d.tar.gz, as created by:
tar czvf mods.d.tar.gz mods.d/*
Several front ends (particularly for small devices) do require modules in a different format though, as a zipped file.
mods.d.tar.gz is a gzipped file.
It is also helpful to people who have no access to direct internet connections to be able to download zipped modules.