- from Changes
- Remove load_class calls per Spoon 0.21
- Move archive commit hook into super class
- Split Kwiki::COmmand into Spoon::Command
- Make kwiki -compress work again :\
- Change -subwiki to -new_view
- List all plugins commented out in plugins file
- Support PagePrivacy
- Support multiple config*.*
- Make toolbar, widgets, and status prereqs of theme
- from Changes
- WARNING: Deprecated the use of the group accessor in list context
when used to retrieve keys: see 'WARNING' POD section
- Added 'default' option to the Class::constr pragma plus tests
- Fixed the possibilty of setting twice the same property when copy => 1
- Minor changes in the constructor closure
- Added possibility to get a slice of values from groups accessors
- A few minor improvement and fixes in the groups closure (all the props exist,
the groups accessor uses always the props accessor if defined, etc)
- Added $_ aliasing for the post_process option
- A few minor POD changes and fixes
Timer Applet is a countdown timer applet for the GNOME panel.
Highlights:
* Quickly set a time and the applet will notify you when time's up
* Create presets for quick access to frequently-used times
* Small and unobtrusive. Choose to either view the remaining time right in
the panel or hide it so you don't get distracted by the countdown.
You can still view the remaining time by hovering your mouse over the
timer icon
* User interface follows the GNOME Human Interface Guidelines
versions did not work on FreeBSD 4, while most of the enhancements
in them seemed to be on the Windows side. I still have not ported
streamripper to RELENG_4.
I'm dropping the maintainership of devel/desktop-file-utils,
which should probably go to gnome@FreeBSD.org.
PR: ports/76439
Submitted by: Jean-Yves Lefort <jylefort@brutele.be>
Add rcNG startup script. [2]
Noticed by: Gary Dunn (knowtree at aloha.com) [1]
Inspired by: Jose M Rodriguez (josemi at freebsd.jazztel.es) [2]
Bits and pieces for [2] stolen from:
src/etc/rc.d/xfs, apache2 and squid ports
name was assigned to what was actually a much older (circa March 2002)
denial-of-service issue. Document it, since occassionally the CVE name
crops up and then I wonder why we missed it.