Thanks for the explanations. I've followed your guides and it worked.
Now I have to version, a native version compiled thanks to Manuel and the flatpak version. Great!
You got us guessing a bit there @rderooy (you goofed? )
Now I will wrap myself in silence again. ;-)
That's not needed, I was just addressing the follow-up posts in short succession (for good order)
Haven't migrated to Linux desktop (Fedora) yet, but I'm happy with the Flatpak app, seems pretty ideal!
This should make running a development build alongside the stable pretty trivial right? Adjust the .yaml a bit & build!
This should make running a development build alongside the stable pretty trivial right? Adjust the .yaml a bit & build!
Yeah, that should be quite easy if a development branch will be distributed via flatpak.
id really like a PORTABLE version of openMSX
id really like a PORTABLE version of openMSX
You mean for Windows right? (I believe Flatpaks can be made portable (create-usb
), otherwise AppImage.)
I think that should be possible with PortableApps.com Launcher
It's already possible to run openMSX in a portable way with the aid of a .bat file (has been discussed here (not too long ago) & in openMSX's issue tracker). Catapult uses the registry though. That's where PA Launcher would come in.
no,im running linux
i believe its called an appimage then
example non msx related program
put in on a stick and bring it everywhere.... who WOULDNT want that??
For Linux, in addition to flatpak, there is snap and appimage that allow you to create a package that works on multiple distributions. But I have never created a snap or appimage package before. And you can install flatpak on pretty much every distribution, so I don't see a real need to create a snap or appimage package.
And as mentioned, you can make a flatpak somewhat portable with create-usb if you want to carry it around.
https://docs.flatpak.org/en/latest/usb-drives.html
no,im running linux
i believe its called an appimage then
example non msx related program
put in on a stick and bring it everywhere.... who WOULDNT want that??
But why not bring your own laptop then? Otherwise you are still dependent on other people's OS and stuff...
if i can choose between a laptop or a USB stick....
even if i HAD a laptop... (not everybody has one)
and even then...
windows version + linux version on one stick and everybody can be served