On 2020-04-13 14:59, Pete Wright wrote: > On 4/12/20 12:26 PM, Eric McCorkle wrote: >> All, >> >> Given how Zoom is getting used a lot more these days, I've started >> working on a port that installs the Zoom linux client. >> >> Here is a link to my github if anyone wants to help: >> >> https://github.com/emc2/freebsd-ports/tree/zoom >> >> >> I'm not done yet. The zoom linux client installs a bunch of Qt >> libraries in its own directory. These either need to be installed >> with >> a port, or else the right configs need to be set to search for >> libraries >> there. >> >> I'm going to take a break, but I'm going to circle back to this. >> > > Thanks Eric, I remember trying to get this working several months ago > via the linux compatibility layer and got stuck. i hope to take > another wack at it based on your repository. in my ideal world i'd be > able to get this working in a jail via, but i think just getting the > bits to work is probably the most important task. > > i've had working solutions based on jitsi and riot.im with acceptable > performance, so i suspect our webcamd bits are in good enough shape to > support this. interested to see how how this effort progresses :) > > -pete A few things - using "latest" for the distfile isn't going to work, as soon as they update the file it will break the port. Also they ship a whole bunch of libraries without any licenses. For sure there is Apache and BSD code in there. I guess somebody could write Boston to the the GPL licenses, but the other libraries are totally a no-go without licenses. Are they using the "commerical" version of Qt? Or maybe they just got liberal with it like they did the other stuff? I think the commercial version is different than normal people have, if not now then soon. -- Waitman GobbleReceived on Mon Apr 13 2020 - 17:09:52 UTC
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