From 7e5bf17f9e14b4a24346c402bf5fcf88772c50f3 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: David Robillard Date: Thu, 9 Feb 2012 23:23:54 +0000 Subject: Portability fixes (plugins work on OSX). --- plugins/eg-amp.lv2/manifest.ttl | 91 ----------------------------------------- 1 file changed, 91 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 plugins/eg-amp.lv2/manifest.ttl (limited to 'plugins/eg-amp.lv2/manifest.ttl') diff --git a/plugins/eg-amp.lv2/manifest.ttl b/plugins/eg-amp.lv2/manifest.ttl deleted file mode 100644 index 821c977..0000000 --- a/plugins/eg-amp.lv2/manifest.ttl +++ /dev/null @@ -1,91 +0,0 @@ -# LV2 Bundle Manifest -# -# All LV2 plugins are installed as "bundles", a directory with a particular -# format. Inside the bundle, the entry point is a file called "manifest.ttl". -# This file lists what plugins are in this bundle, and which files are (.so, -# .ttl, etc.) are associated with those plugins. -# -# Hosts read bundles' manifest.ttl to discover what plugins (and other -# resources) are available. Manifest files should be as small as possible for -# performance reasons. -# -# The syntax of this file (and most other LV2 data files) is a language called -# Turtle ("Turse RDF Triple Language").[1] RDF[3] is a data model that -# expresses the relationship between things as (subject, predicate, object) -# triples. Turtle is a simple, terse, abbreviated syntax for RDF. - -# Namespace Prefixes - -@prefix lv2: . -@prefix rdfs: . - -# Data (list of resources in this bundle, hence "manifest") - - - a lv2:Plugin ; - lv2:binary ; - rdfs:seeAlso . - -# Explanation -# -# In short, this declares that the resource with URI -# "http://lv2plug.in/plugins/eg-amp") is an LV2 plugin, with executable code in -# the file "amp.so" and a full description in "amp.ttl". These paths are -# relative to the bundle directory. -# -# There are 3 statements in this description: -# -# # | Subject | Predicate | Object -# ------------------------------------------------------------------- -# 1 | | a | lv2:Plugin -# 2 | | lv2:binary | -# 3 | | rdfs:seeAlso | -# -# The semicolon is used to continue the previous subject, an equivalent -# but more verbose syntax for the same data is: -# -# a lv2:Plugin . -# lv2:binary ; -# rdfs:seeAlso . -# -# Note that the documentation for a URI can often be found by visiting that URI -# in a web browser, e.g. the documentation for lv2:binary can be found at -# . If you encounter a predicate in some -# data which you do not understand, try this first. -# -# Note the URI of a plugin does NOT need to be an actual web address, it's just -# a global identifier. It is, however, a good idea to use an actual web -# address if possible, since it can be used to easily access documentation, -# downloads, etc. Note there are compatibility rules for when the URI of a -# plugin must be changed, see the LV2 specification[4] for details. -# -# A detailed explanation of each statement follows. -# -# 1: a lv2:Plugin -# -# The "a" is a Turtle shortcut for rdf:type and more or less means "is a". -# lv2:Plugin expands to (using the -# "lv2:" prefix above) and is the established URI for the type "LV2 Plugin". -# This statement literally means "this resource is an LV2 plugin". -# -# 2: lv2:binary -# -# This says "this plugin has executable code ("binary") in the file -# named "amp.so", which is located in this bundle. The LV2 specification -# defines that all relative URIs in manifest files are relative to the bundle -# directory, so this refers to the file amp.so in the same directory as this -# manifest.ttl file. -# -# 3: rdfs:seeAlso -# -# This says "there is more information about this plugin located in the file -# "amp.ttl". The host will look at all such files when it needs to actually -# use or investigate the plugin. - -# Footnotes -# -# [1] http://www.w3.org/TeamSubmission/turtle/ -# [2] http://www.w3.org/RDF/ -# http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/REC-rdf-primer-20040210/ -# [3] http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3986 -# [4] http://lv2plug.in/ns/lv2core \ No newline at end of file -- cgit v1.2.1