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author | Klaus Schmidinger <kls (at) cadsoft (dot) de> | 2007-04-22 18:00:00 +0200 |
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committer | Klaus Schmidinger <kls (at) cadsoft (dot) de> | 2007-04-22 18:00:00 +0200 |
commit | a5921252942f73601b159f20b560477ec45b4ece (patch) | |
tree | d1fbcbe0e7526a823898676767988e984d565b8d /epg.c | |
parent | 9f42c33ef6793482a5c2515f9a87c13c0d189c60 (diff) | |
download | vdr-patch-lnbsharing-a5921252942f73601b159f20b560477ec45b4ece.tar.gz vdr-patch-lnbsharing-a5921252942f73601b159f20b560477ec45b4ece.tar.bz2 |
Version 1.5.2vdr-1.5.2
- Updated the Finnish OSD texts (thanks to Rolf Ahrenberg).
- Fixed handling user activity for shutdown, which I had messed when adopting Udo's
original patch (thanks to Udo Richter).
- Added Turkish language texts (thanks to Oktay Yolgeçen).
- Added missing rules for generating iso8859-13 font to Makefile.
- 'libsi' now converts the incoming strings into the system's character set
according to the DVB standard. The system's character set is determined from
the LANG environment variable. If no recognizable setting can be found, no
conversion will take place. Note that currently only the strings received from the
SI data stream are converted, there have not been any changes regarding displaying
UTF-8 characters on the OSD, yet - this will follow in one of the next steps.
With this conversion, it should now be safe to run VDR on a UTF-8 file system,
because all incoming characters are converted to UTF-8. This will most likely
result in wrong characters being displayed on the OSD (because there UTF-8 is
not known, yet), but the file names should be ok (haven't tested this myself,
though, because I don't do UTF-8 - so please be very careful when testing!).
There's one piece of bad news here: the German pay-tv broadcaster Premiere
apparently encodes all EPG strings as ISO8859-1, but fails to correctly mark
these strings as such. Therefore 'libsi' (following the DVB standard) considers
the strings to be encoded in the default ISO6937 and converts them to whatever
the system's character set is. This, of course, results in wrong umlauts.
On its old transponder, the ProSieben/SAT.1 channels also had their EPG data
wrongly encoded, but apparently on the new transponder they started broadcasting
on this month, they got it right.
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