From fe39ffb8b90ae4e002ed73fe98617cd590abb467 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
Date: Sat, 27 Apr 2024 08:33:50 +0200
Subject: Adding upstream version 2.4.56.

Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
---
 docs/icons/README | 166 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 1 file changed, 166 insertions(+)
 create mode 100644 docs/icons/README

(limited to 'docs/icons/README')

diff --git a/docs/icons/README b/docs/icons/README
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..48250d5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/docs/icons/README
@@ -0,0 +1,166 @@
+Public Domain Icons
+
+     These icons were originally made for Mosaic for X and have been
+     included in the NCSA httpd and Apache server distributions in the
+     past. They are in the public domain and may be freely included in any
+     application. The originals were done by Kevin Hughes (kevinh@kevcom.com).
+     Andy Polyakov tuned the icon colors and added a few new images.
+
+     If you'd like to contribute additions to this set, contact the httpd
+     documentation project <http://httpd.apache.org/docs-project/>.
+
+     Almost all of these icons are 20x22 pixels in size.  There are
+     alternative icons in the "small" directory that are 16x16 in size,
+     provided by Mike Brown (mike@hyperreal.org).
+
+Suggested Uses
+
+The following are a few suggestions, to serve as a starting point for ideas.
+Please feel free to tweak and rename the icons as you like.
+
+     a.gif
+          This might be used to represent PostScript or text layout
+          languages.
+
+     alert.black.gif, alert.red.gif
+          These can be used to highlight any important items, such as a
+          README file in a directory.
+
+     back.gif, forward.gif
+          These can be used as links to go to previous and next areas.
+
+     ball.gray.gif, ball.red.gif
+          These might be used as bullets.
+
+     binary.gif
+          This can be used to represent binary files.
+
+     binhex.gif
+          This can represent BinHex-encoded data.
+
+     blank.gif
+          This can be used as a placeholder or a spacing element.
+
+     bomb.gif
+          This can be used to represent core files.
+
+     box1.gif, box2.gif
+          These icons can be used to represent generic 3D applications and
+          related files.
+
+     broken.gif
+          This can represent corrupted data.
+
+     burst.gif
+          This can call attention to new and important items.
+
+     c.gif
+          This might represent C source code.
+
+     comp.blue.gif, comp.gray.gif
+          These little computer icons can stand for telnet or FTP
+          sessions.
+
+     compressed.gif
+          This may represent compressed data.
+
+     continued.gif
+          This can be a link to a continued listing of a directory.
+
+     down.gif, up.gif, left.gif, right.gif
+          These can be used to scroll up, down, left and right in a
+          listing or may be used to denote items in an outline.
+
+     dir.gif
+          Identical to folder.gif below.
+
+     diskimg.gif
+          This can represent floppy disk storage.
+
+     dvi.gif
+          This can represent DVI files.
+
+     f.gif
+          This might represent FORTRAN or Forth source code.
+
+     folder.gif, folder.open.gif, folder.sec.gif
+          The folder can represent directories. There is also a version
+          that can represent secure directories or directories that cannot
+          be viewed.
+
+     generic.gif, generic.sec.gif, generic.red.gif
+          These can represent generic files, secure files, and important
+          files, respectively.
+
+     hand.right.gif, hand.up.gif
+          These can point out important items (pun intended).
+
+     image1.gif, image2.gif, image3.gif
+          These can represent image formats of various types.
+
+     index.gif
+          This might represent a WAIS index or search facility.
+
+     layout.gif
+          This might represent files and formats that contain graphics as
+          well as text layout, such as HTML and PDF files.
+
+     link.gif
+          This might represent files that are symbolic links.
+
+     movie.gif
+          This can represent various movie formats.
+
+     p.gif
+          This may stand for Perl or Python source code.
+
+     pie0.gif ... pie8.gif
+          These icons can be used in applications where a list of
+          documents is returned from a search. The little pie chart images
+          can denote how relevant the documents may be to your search
+          query.
+
+     patch.gif
+          This may stand for patches and diff files.
+
+     portal.gif
+          This might be a link to an online service or a 3D world.
+
+     pdf.gif, ps.gif, quill.gif
+          These may represent PDF and PostScript files.
+
+     screw1.gif, screw2.gif
+          These may represent CAD or engineering data and formats.
+
+     script.gif
+          This can represent any of various interpreted languages, such as
+          Perl, python, TCL, and shell scripts, as well as server
+          configuration files.
+
+     sound1.gif, sound2.gif
+          These can represent sound files.
+
+     sphere1.gif, sphere2.gif
+          These can represent 3D worlds or rendering applications and
+          formats.
+
+     tar.gif
+          This can represent TAR archive files.
+
+     tex.gif
+          This can represent TeX files.
+
+     text.gif
+          This can represent generic (plain) text files.
+
+     transfer.gif
+          This can represent FTP transfers or uploads/downloads.
+
+     unknown.gif
+          This may represent a file of an unknown type.
+
+     uu.gif, uuencoded.gif
+          This can stand for uuencoded data.
+
+     world1.gif, world2.gif
+          These can represent 3D worlds or other 3D formats.
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