Contents: 1) What is a default? 2) Where are defaults used? 3) How do you build a default? 4) What are the contents of an .info file? 5) What about .dmpkg files? 6) Details about the default types 1) What is a default? A default can consist of one or many of the following: - skins - lamedbs - config files - favourite files - ipk packages 2) Where are defaults used? There are several places, where defaults are used. Some require user interaction and some don't. - First of all an "image default" is installed, when you start e2 for the first time. No user interaction is needed for that. - After that e2 tries to mount a "preset partion" (also called "dealer partition"). If this partition contains defaults, the user is presented with a list of these defaults and can choose to install/not install each of these defaults. - You can create ".dmpkg files" and put them on a SD card (or something, that will be given to the FileScanner. - The default satlists feature uses defaults. 3) How do you build a default? A default contains at least an .info file (see next section for details). The .info file contains meta information about data, that this default consists of. Furthermore the default can contain the data, you wish to install (skin, lamedbs etc.). The data can also lie on some http server. 4) What are the contents of an .info file? The .info file is an XMl file containing meta information about what this default contains. The basic structure is as follows: ... ... ... Prerequisites can be used globally for this default (as seen in the sketch above) or in the area for specific files (see below for details). Prerequisites can have the following tags: (e.g. boxtype "dm8000") (e.g. DVB-S, DVB-T, DVB-C) (e.g. 192 for Astra 19.2E) Used in the global section of the .info file, the default can ONLY be installed if ALL prerequisites are fulfilled. Something similar applies to the use of prerequisites in the section. But in contrary to not being able to install the whole default, the prerequisites in the section can only exclude distinct entries. For example, you have a lamedb containing only services and transponders for Astra 19.2E and this is the only stuff in your default. Then you would define a in the global section, so that cable or terrestrial boxes don't get the possibility for the useless default and use a whith the tag for the lamedb with the 19.2 transponders/services. The tag must contain a tag and can (but should!) contain an tag: Dream Multimedia GmbH Dream Multimedia Default The tag is presented to the user as the name for the default to install. The tag can contain several tags. Each tag must have "type" and a "name" attribute and can have a directory attribute which is the directory relative to the .info file, where the file in the "name" attribute is stored (exception: type="skin" => "name" is the description of the skin, since skins are always stored in whole directories, not single files). The "type" attribute can be "skin", "config", "services", "favourites" or "package". A short example for every type: As mentioned above, each tag can have it's own prerequisites. An example for a lamedb, containing only transponders for Astra 19.2 would be: So this would only install the lamedb.192 file, if you have a DVB-S NIM in your box AND some of the tuners is configured to 19.2. 5) What about .dmpkg files? .dmpkg files are nothing else than tar'ed defaults. You can also use gzipped tars. 6) Details about the default types - "image default" An image default is stored in /usr/share/enigma2/defaults. You can have several defaults at the same time, but you should keep in mind, that these defaults are all installed without user interaction. So defaults with contrary contents should be avoided (e.g. setting a default parameter in one settings file and setting another setting for the same parameter in another could lead to unexpected behaviour, since the installation order is undetermined and completely random. so use prerequisites insted) The "image default" is also used to set box specific config elements (for example show the new RC on a dm8000) and install the default bouquets. - The "preset partition" defaults are stored in /usr/share/enigma2/dealer or in an mtd partition which must be calles "preset partition". The user is presented a list of the names of the installable (installable means, that all prerequisites in the global section are met) defaults and can choose the defaults to install. This can be used for customizing a users box. For example, a dealer can put in a skin, the settings for the user's sat dish etc. into the preset partition. This partition will not be overwritten by an original Dream image. So if the user installs a new image from the Dream website, the default settings are presented to the user in the start wizard of the new image. - .dmpkg Packages are already explained in detail. This could be used to easily distribute update for packages (e.g. the e2 core package) for quick hotfixes on boxes without internet connection. The advantage over normal .ipk packages is, that one .dmpkg package can contain more than one .ipk package. - Default satlists are stored either in the "image default"-directory or in the "preset partition" directory. The satlists must contain a tag in the global tag: Only if this tag is present, the user get's this default presented in the default satlist selection (and nowhere else!).