The name is a bit cleaner, and has been the preferred option(!)
since meson 1.1.
Mutter recently updated the name, so follow suite.
The meson version bump shouldn't be an issue, given that several
hard dependencies like mutter and glib already require higher
versions.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell-extensions/-/merge_requests/349>
A long time ago, we used to include a system monitor extension,
that added CPU/memory graphs to the (long gone) message tray.
However demand for this type of extensions hasn't died down, to the
point where RHEL includes a revived version of the old extension.
Account for that demand by adding a newly written system-monitor
extension that has been properly designed, and hopefully does not
bring back the CPU/memory issues of the previous one (unlikely
without the graphs) …
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell-extensions/-/merge_requests/277>
Provide all licenses used in the project in a LICENSES folder and
add SPDX license and copyright information for all files in
accordance with the Reuse Software[0] specification.
The copyright information is based on the file's git history,
using a fairly generous definition of "non-trivial".
As of the spec recommendation, the information is generally added
as comments in the files themselves, except for
- NEWS, README and similar top-level standard files, so that
a SPDX code isn't the first thing people encounter
- files that don't support comments (json) or where they'd
be a bit awkward (.desktop, .service)
- anything under po/, to not interfere with translation teams
Those are covered by a .reuse/dep5 files, except for image assets,
where separate .license files are used (It would be possible to
add comments to SVG files, but I don't trust image editors to
preserve them).
[0] https://reuse.software/
Part-of:
<https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell-extensions/-/merge_requests/224>
Now that gnome-shell supports a light style, people may want to
use it without forcing all apps to be light.
Add a small extension that switches the default to light, so the
shell follows the regular "dark style" preference.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell-extensions/-/merge_requests/256>
gnome-shell now includes a light variant, and supports switching
between dark- and light styling at runtime.
That means we no longer have to build our own stylesheet, and can
instead just instruct gnome-shell to always use the light style
in the classic session.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell-extensions/-/merge_requests/254>