Note that these directories are be removed by other dependency ports,
so I do not bump PORTREVISION for them. These affected ports are
belong to ports@.
PR: ports/101586
Submitted by: Stanislav Sedov <ssedov at mbsd.msk.ru>
- Being XEmacs compilable, thanks to Denis Shaposhnikov <dsh@vlink.ru>
- Update the MASTER_SITES
PR: ports/101679
Submitted by: Dryice Liu (maintainer)
- Add USE_GETTEXT=yes
PR: ports/101516
Submitted by: Stanislav Sedov <ssedov at mbsd.msk.ru>
Approved by: Franz Klammer <klammer at webonaut.com> (maintainer)
will be linked against it anyway, not against a system one.
PR: ports/101440
Submitted by: Stanislav Sedov <ssedov at mbsd.msk.ru>
Approved by: Herbert J. Skuhra <h.skuhra at gmail.com> (maintainer)
will be linked against it anyway, not against a system one.
- Define USE_GETTEXT to make portlint happy
- Define INSTALLS_ICONS to update icon cache
PR: ports/101444
Submitted by: Stanislav Sedov <ssedov at mbsd.msk.ru>
- Bring in line with other linux-gecko ports, thus inheriting
all the features of the infrastructure:
o Static plist
o desktop file
o XPI/NPAPI support
Approved by: Aaron Voisine <voisine@gmail.com> (maintainer)
Try to fix Undefined symbol "pthread_attr_init" symbol:
Although TaskJugglerUI is linked with -pthread, the resulting binary
is not linked agains libpthread. (huh? gcc trying to be too smart?)
Adding a dummy pthread_ call fixes this.
Bump Portrevision
PR: 98205, 98517
Reported by: Ken Gunderson <kgunders@teamcool.net>
Daniel Graupner <Daniel@smartcast.org>
catalogs of the contents of any arbitrary media. Primarily it is most
useful for cataloging CDs, DVDs, and other such removeable media. The
catalogs can be quickly searched (including across multiple catalogs)
with regular expressions, exported as CSV or HTML files, sorted, and
statistical information gathered.
WWW: http://cdcat.sourceforge.net/
PR: ports/96828
Submitted by: Aren Tyr <aren.tyr at gawab.com>
program. Remind's power lies in its programmability, and Wyrd does not hide
this capability behind flashy GUI dialogs. Rather, Wyrd is designed to make you
more efficient at editing your reminder files directly. It also offers a
scrollable timetable suitable for visualizing your schedule at a glance. Here
is a screenshot.
Unlike most of the calendar applications available today, Wyrd is designed to
be both lightweight and fast. Startup time is negligible, UI navigation is
instantaneous, and the wyrd process typically consumes less than 2MB of
resident memory.
WWW: http://www.eecs.umich.edu/~pelzlpj/wyrd/
PR: ports/95361
Submitted by: Russell A. Jackson <raj at csub.edu>