# x11-skell post installation script. # Stuart Winter # Jan 2022 # Collapse all 32bit ARM & x86 variants of 'i?86' into a single # platform: 'x86' and 'arm' respectively. export ARCH=$( uname -m | sed -e 's%i[0-9]86%x86%g' -e 's?arm.*?arm?g' ) HWM=$( strings /proc/device-tree/model 2>/dev/null ) # Exit silently if we don't detect the Hardware Model. # This avoids warnings/errors. # We may need to surface these at some point but for the moment it's not # a concern. [ -z "${HWM}" ] && exit 0 # Location of the system Xorg config file: XORGCONF=etc/X11/xorg.conf.d/xorg.conf # Determine any xorg config file for the Hardware Model we find ourselves # running upon: # The Rpi4 no longer requires a config since work on the VC4 driver # has progressed. #case "${HWM}" in # "Raspberry Pi 4"*) # # To accommodate future divergence: # #HWM_XORGCONF=bcm2711/xorg.conf.rpi4 ;; # HWM_XORGCONF=generic/xorg.conf.fbdev0 ;; ## The Raspberry Pi 3 uses Xorg auto detection and configuration. ## No need to supply an Xorg config. ## "Raspberry Pi 3"*) ## #HWM_XORGCONF=bcm2837/xorg.conf.rpi3 ;; ## HWM_XORGCONF=generic/xorg.conf.fbdev0 ;; #esac # Slackware ARM does not ship an xorg.conf by default, so # if we find one it means that the user installed it, or it was # installed from this package. # Either way, for now we'll do nothing since I don't want to modify # anybody's config. # In the future we can install this with the '.new' suffix, but the # user can always pull it from /usr/share/x11-skel/platform. [ ! -f $XORGCONF ] && { [ -f usr/share/x11-skel/platform/$ARCH/$HWM_XORGCONF ] && \ install -pm644 usr/share/x11-skel/platform/$ARCH/$HWM_XORGCONF $XORGCONF }