Aegis is a transaction-based software configuration management system.
It provides a framework within which a team of developers may work
on many changes to a program independently, and Aegis coordinates
integrating these changes back into the master source of the program,
with as little disruption as possible.
Author: Peter Miller <millerp@canb.auug.org.au>
WWW: http://aegis.sourceforge.net/
PR: ports/54060
Submitted by: vance@aurema.com
wonderful kernel APIs. c2man seems to choke on tcp_subr.c (which I was using
as a baseline), so let's do it the long way round instead. This script spits
out mdoc(7) markup ready for pasting into the SYNOPSIS section of our
wonderful mdoc.template.
It is standalone version of argp - part of glibc library.
It was separated off glibc by Niels Myller, Niels primary use
it for inclusion in the LSH distribution, but it's useful for
any package that wants to use argp and at the same time be
portable to non-glibc systems.
Besides portability fixes, there are a few other changes in
this version. The most important is that it no longer builds
upon getopt; the one or two hairy functions of GNU getopt are
incorporated with the argp parser. There are longer any global
variables keeping track of the parser state.
PR: ports/63568
Submitted by: Sergey Matveychuk <sem@ciam.ru>
various other things with a patch. It basically allows you to create a chain of
readers that can read a patch, remove files from a patch, add CVS context, fix
up the patch root according to CVS, and output the patch as raw unified or
through a template processor (used in some places to output a patch as HTML).
Author: John Keiser <john@johnkeiser.com>
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/PatchReader/
PR: ports/62673
Submitted by: Toni Viemero <toni.viemero@iki.fi>
framework for the serialization of arbitrary ISO C data types. OSSP
xds consists of three components: the generic encoding and decoding
framework, a set of shipped engines to encode and decode values in
certain existing formats (Sun RPC/XDR and XDS/XML are currently
provided), and a run-time context, which is used to manage buffers,
registered engines, etc. The library is designed to allow fully
recursive and efficient encoding/decoding of arbitrary nested data.
PR: ports/63182
Submitted by: Kimura Fuyuki <fuyuki@nigredo.org>
functions for handling, matching, parsing, searching and formatting of
ISO-C strings. So it can be considered as a superset of POSIX
string(3), but its main intention is to provide a more convenient and
compact API plus a more generalized functionality.
WWW: http://www.ossp.org/pkg/lib/str/
PR: ports/63180
Submitted by: Kimura Fuyuki <fuyuki@nigredo.org>
1.8 or later.
Like this one, there are a bunch of ruby ports that don't support 1.8
yet, and I'll take care of them in near future, too. Sorry for the
inconvenience.