diff options
author | Jonathan Blandford <jrb@gnome.org> | 2004-07-13 22:05:05 +0000 |
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committer | jrb <jrb> | 2004-07-13 22:05:05 +0000 |
commit | 2a3b70fd794c64aac1dfc9d8ba567888195d0903 (patch) | |
tree | 32bc7e2143987420312ed15b88ed60b42e282907 /desktop-entry | |
parent | 287d9d1db4bbee2318be31cbb8a0d2a7b4f196f5 (diff) |
Update the MIME description to make it more relevent.
Tue Jul 13 18:04:11 2004 Jonathan Blandford <jrb@gnome.org>
* desktop-entry-spec.xml: Update the MIME description to make it
more relevent.
Diffstat (limited to 'desktop-entry')
-rw-r--r-- | desktop-entry/ChangeLog | 5 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | desktop-entry/desktop-entry-spec.xml | 184 |
2 files changed, 98 insertions, 91 deletions
diff --git a/desktop-entry/ChangeLog b/desktop-entry/ChangeLog index 9a9fa07..8ec57c3 100644 --- a/desktop-entry/ChangeLog +++ b/desktop-entry/ChangeLog @@ -1,3 +1,8 @@ +Tue Jul 13 18:04:11 2004 Jonathan Blandford <jrb@gnome.org> + + * desktop-entry-spec.xml: Update the MIME description to make it + more relevent. + 2004-04-19 Mark McLoughlin <mark@skynet.ie> Pointed out by Ville Skyttä <ville.skytta@iki.fi> diff --git a/desktop-entry/desktop-entry-spec.xml b/desktop-entry/desktop-entry-spec.xml index 1d5716a..c890a57 100644 --- a/desktop-entry/desktop-entry-spec.xml +++ b/desktop-entry/desktop-entry-spec.xml @@ -61,16 +61,15 @@ should be simply called <filename>.directory</filename>. </para> <para> - The basic format of the desktop entry file requires that there be a - "group" header named <literal>[Desktop Entry]</literal>. - This "group" entry denotes that all - <literal>{key,value}</literal> pairs following it belong in - the Desktop Entry group. There may be other groups present in - the file (see MIME types discussion below), but this is the most - important group which explicitly needs to be supported. This group - should also be used as the "magic key" for automatic MIME type - detection. There should be nothing proceeding this group in the - desktop entry file but possibly one or more comments (see + The basic format of the desktop entry file requires that there be + a "group" header named <literal>[Desktop Entry]</literal>. This + "group" entry denotes that all <literal>{key,value}</literal> + pairs following it belong in the Desktop Entry group. There may + be other groups present in the file, but this is the most + important group which explicitly needs to be supported. This + group should also be used as the "magic key" for automatic MIME + type detection. There should be nothing proceeding this group in + the desktop entry file but possibly one or more comments (see below). </para> <para> @@ -92,18 +91,16 @@ <para> Entries in the file are <literal>{key,value}</literal> pairs in the format: </para> - <programlisting> -Name=Value</programlisting> + <programlisting>Key=Value</programlisting> <para> Space before and after the equals sign should be ignored; the <literal>=</literal> sign is the actual delimiter. </para> <para> - The escape sequences <literal>\s</literal>, - <literal>\n</literal>, <literal>\t</literal>, - <literal>\r</literal>, and <literal>\\</literal> are supported, - meaning ASCII space, newline, tab, carriage return, and - backslash, respectively. + The escape sequences <literal>\s</literal>, <literal>\n</literal>, + <literal>\t</literal>, <literal>\r</literal>, and + <literal>\\</literal> are supported, meaning ASCII space, newline, + tab, carriage return, and backslash, respectively. </para> </sect1> <sect1 id="value-types"> @@ -113,16 +110,17 @@ Name=Value</programlisting> boolean (encoded as the string true/false), and numeric. </para> <para> - The difference between string and localestring is that the value for - a string key must contain only ASCII characters while the value - of a localestring key may contain UTF-8 characters. + Values of type <literal>string</literal> must contain only ASCII + characters excluding control characters. Values of type + <literal>localestring</literal> are user displayable, and are + encoded in UTF-8 unless the <constant>Legacy-Mixed</constant> + Encoding is specified (see <xref linkend="legacy-mixed"/>.) </para> <para> Some keys can have multiple values; these should be separated by a semicolon. Those keys which have several values should have a - semicolon as the trailing character. For lists of strings, - semicolons are simply not allowed in the strings, there is no - escape mechanism. + semicolon as the trailing character. Semicolons in these values + need to be escaped using <literal>\;</literal>. </para> </sect1> <sect1 id="recognized-keys"> @@ -372,7 +370,7 @@ Name=Value</programlisting> <entry>1-4</entry> </row> <row> - <entry id="key-hidden">Hidden</entry> + <entry id="key-hidden"><varname>Hidden</varname></entry> <entry> <varname>Hidden</varname> should have been called <varname>Deleted</varname>. It means the user deleted (at his level) @@ -476,7 +474,7 @@ Name=Value</programlisting> <entry> The MIME type(s) supported by this entry. </entry> - <entry>regexp(s)</entry> + <entry>strings(s)</entry> <entry>NO</entry> <entry>NO</entry> <entry>1</entry> @@ -778,76 +776,80 @@ Name=Value</programlisting> </informaltable> </sect1> <sect1 id="mime-types"> - <title>Detailed discussion of supporting MIME types</title> - <para> - It is in every desktop's best interest to have thorough support for - MIME types. The old <filename>/etc/mailcap</filename> and - <filename>/etc/mime.types</filename> files are rather - limited in scope and frankly, are outdated. Various desktop systems - have come up with different ways of extending this original system, - but none are compatible with each other. The Desktop Entry Specification - hopes to be able to provide the beginnings of a solution to this - problem. - </para> - <para> - At a very basic level, the <varname>Exec</varname> key provides the default action to - take when the program described by a desktop entry is used to open a - document or data file. Usually this consists of some action along the - lines of <literal>kedit %f</literal> or <literal>ee %f</literal>. This is a good - start, but it isn't as flexible as it can be. - </para> - <para> - Let us first establish that a program which supports a MIME type or - multiple MIME types may be able to support multiple actions on those - MIME types as well. The desktop entry may want to define additional - actions in addition to the default. The top level <varname>Exec</varname> key describes - the default action; Let us define this action to also be known as the - "Open" action. Additional actions which might be possible include - "View", "Edit", "Play", etc. A further revision of this document will - probably specify several "standard" actions in addition to the default - "Open" action, but in all cases, the number of actions is - arbitrary. - </para> - <para> - Let us use a sound player as a simple example. Call it <literal>sp</literal>. The - default <varname>Exec</varname> (Open) action for this program would likely look - something like: - </para> - <programlisting> -Exec=sp %u</programlisting> - <para> - However, imagine the sound player also supports editing of sound files - in a graphical manner. We might wish to define an additional action - which could accommodate this. Adding the action would be performed - like this: - </para> - <programlisting> -Actions=Edit; - -[Desktop Action Edit] -Exec=sp -edit %u</programlisting> + <title>Registering MIME Types</title> <para> - As you can see, defining the action "Edit" will enable an additional - group of the name <literal>[Desktop Action <replaceable>actionname</replaceable>]</literal> to be read. This - group can contain an additional <varname>Exec</varname> line, as well as possibly other - information like a new <varname>Name</varname>, - <varname>Comment</varname>, <varname>Icon</varname>, and - <varname>Path</varname>. Thus - right-clicking on a .wav file will show both the default "Open" action - and this "Edit" action to both be displayed as choices in the - context-menu. A left click (double or single, whichever the file - manager implements) would cause the default action to take place. - These are implementation specific details which are up to the - implementer, and are not enforced by this standard. + The <varname>MimeType</varname> key is used to indicate the MIME + Types that an application knows how to handle. Applications that + can handle multiple MIME Types would list all of the ones it can + handle in a ';' separated list, as normal. It is expected that + for some applications this list could become long. An application + is expected to be able to reasonably open files of these types + using the command listed in the <varname>Exec</varname> keyword. </para> <para> - If no <varname>DefaultApp</varname> is specified for a particular MIME type, any one of - the programs registered which claim to be able to handle the MIME type - may become the default handler. This behaviour is undefined and - implementation specific. KDE doesn't use a <varname>DefaultApp</varname> anymore, but assigns - a preference number to each program, so that the highest number is the - one chosen for handling the MIME type. + There should be no priority for MIME Types in this field, or any + form of priority in the desktop file. Priority for applications + is handled external to the <filename>.desktop</filename> files. </para> + <sect2 id="mime-caching"> + <title>Caching MIME Types</title> + <para> + To make parsing of all the desktop files less costly, a + <command>update-desktop-database</command> program is provided + that will generate a cache file. The concept is identical to + that of the 'update-mime-database' program in that it lets + applications avoid reading in (potentially) hundreds of files. + It will need to be run after every desktop file is installed. + One cache file is created for every directory in + $XDG_DATA_DIRS/applications/, and will create a file called + $XDG_DATA_DIRS/applications/mimeinfo.cache. + </para> + <para> + The format of the cache is similar to that of the desktop file, + and is just a list mapping mime-types to desktop files. Here's + a quick example of what it would look like: + </para> + <programlisting>application/x-foo=foo.desktop;bar.desktop; +application/x-bar=bar.desktop;</programlisting> + <para> + Each MIME Type is listed only once per cache file, and the + desktop-id is expected to exist in that particular directory. + That is to say, if the cache file is located at + <filename>/usr/share/applications/mimeinfo.cache</filename>, + bar.desktop refers to the file + <filename>/usr/share/applications/bar.desktop</filename>. + </para> + </sect2> + <sect2 id="mime-priority"> + <title>Priority of MIME Types and desktop files</title> + <para> + There is also a preference list to determine preferred + application of a given MIME Type. It defines the 'default' + application to handle a given MIME Type. It has the same format + as the cache list. + </para> + <programlisting>mime/type=desktop-id.desktop;</programlisting> + <para> + If a mime type is listed multiple times (either in the same + file, or in another file further down the search path), the + latter mention wins. If a listed file doesn't exist, or is + precluded through the <varname>OnlyShowIn</varname> or + <varname>NotShowIn</varname> files, they should be ignored. + This means that applications will have to keep a history of the + preferred applications that they run into, so that if the top + desktop file for a given MIME Type isn't available, the second + one can be tested, etc. + </para> + <para> + It is also worth noting who this mechanism is defined for. It + is primarily intended for use by distributors/sysadmins to + provide a sane set of defaults for their users. Additionally, + users themselves can use this mechanism to override the user + defaults. We intentionally don't provide a way for application + authors themselves to list themselves as the default for a given + type, as we felt that that cannot work. + </para> + </sect2> </sect1> <sect1 id="extending"> <title>Extending the format</title> |