In my automated testing I've noticed that some apps create desktop links without asking and there's no way to avoid them. It's a similar situation for start menu entries.
It would be nice to be able to have an entire install fully contained in a .wine folder that could be cleanly deleted after the test is done. This isn't currently the case.
Would it be appropriate to have a registry key or environment variable to disable this behavior silently? Or is hacking scripts to delete individual entries afterwards the right approach?
Thanks, Scott Ritchie
On Thu, Jul 22, 2010 at 11:56 PM, Scott Ritchie scott@open-vote.org wrote:
In my automated testing I've noticed that some apps create desktop links without asking and there's no way to avoid them. It's a similar situation for start menu entries.
It would be nice to be able to have an entire install fully contained in a .wine folder that could be cleanly deleted after the test is done. This isn't currently the case.
Would it be appropriate to have a registry key or environment variable to disable this behavior silently? Or is hacking scripts to delete individual entries afterwards the right approach?
WINEDLLOVERRIDES="winemenubuilder.exe=d" wine foo.exe