
Originally Posted by
sheldonl
However, it seems that some recipies are not without their problems. For some reason some programs don't work properly. e.g. ksirc doesn't save my preferences or anything. I think that the IO Slave is of much more utility if a recipe is *not* a shell script, but a series of MACRO actions that are interpreted into actual actions on the file system by the daemon. These MACRO's could be defined by plugins to the daemon (service) and be written in shell, perl, python, c, c++ etc. I could probably use the plugin and MACRO code from lineakd to do this but it's a pretty large undertaking, it involves completely standardizing, codifying and reingineering the klik system. However, then each distribution can write macros that are specific to them and you don't have to put platform specific code into the the recipie.