Dan, The nightly build wrapper is a small Python wrapper script like you mention. As far as I can tell the Safari start page is stored in the com.apple.internetconfig domain, which means it's not possible to override it from NSArgumentDomain defaults. It is possible to launch Safari with a *local* page loaded by passing it on the command line -- Safari.app/Contents/MacOS/Safari /path/to/file.html. The idea is to include a file within the WebKit.app wrapper that simply redirects to the real welcome page out on the Internet. Another little feature that I plan to sneak in to the WebKit.app wrapper is notifying the user that their build of WebKit is out of date and pointing them in the direction of a newer build. The easier it is for users to keep up to date, the more useful bug reports WebKit will see :) Regards, Mark Rowe On 27/10/2005, at 18:23 , Dan Wood wrote:
It's gorgeous! Do you have it in HTML/CSS?
Since the nightly build application is really just a wrapper around the existing Safari, but pointing to the new frameworks, you might have to figure out how to override the default startup page, probably by passing in some override preferences in the shell script that launches it (See NSArgumentDomain documentation for that...)
As far as content goes, you may want to have a reference to the incompatibilities between the current webkit builds and the currently released version of Safari, since those bugs could crop up when one is running the nightly build.
Dan Wood
On Oct 26, 2005, at 8:49 PM, Timothy Hatcher wrote:
One item we have been talking about adding to the nightly builds is a page that loads on launch. This page would thank you for testing WebKit and give you links for certain tasks to help us. This is my concept for the page. Feedback and suggestions to improve this are welcomed.
http://colloquy.info/webkit-page.png
— Timothy Hatcher
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