http://library.gnome.org/misc/release-notes/2.26/ for a list of what's new.
On the FreeBSD front, we introduced a port of libxul 1.9 as an alternative
for Firefox 2.0 as a Gecko provider. Almost all of the Gecko consumers
can make use of this provider by setting:
WITH_GECKO=libxul
The GNOME 2.26 port was done by ahze, kwm, marcus, and mezz with
contributions by Joseph S. Atkinson, Peter Wemm, Eric L. Chen,
Martin Matuska, Craig Butler, and Pawel Worach.
remove x-generate-plist and friends
- use RF macro and remove SUBDIR where possible
- remove some uneeded GEM_NAME=${DISTNAME}
(this c/should be handled better in bsd.*.mk)
other deltas specific to individual ports:
audio/rubygem-mp3info - unbreak, fix packaging, bump PORTREVISION
devel/rubygem-rapt - adopt
devel/rubygem-rspec - remove BUILD_DEPENDS=RUN_DEPENDS -- neither set
devel/rubygem-ruby2ruby - add #' for vim highlight
graphics/rubygem-extifr - drop PORTREVISION=0
graphics/rubygem-gd2 - add #' for vim highlight
www/rubygem-rubyfulsoup - swap GEM_NAME / DISTNAME for constistency
Sponsored by: RideCharge Inc.
Tested on: RideCharge's Tinderbox
Reviewed by: stas
to be configured differently and they're always a PITA when you first
install and each and every time they upgrade.
Test::Database provides a simple way for test authors to request
a test database, without worrying about environment variables or the
test host configuration.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Test-Database/
PR: ports/133273
Submitted by: Wen Heping <wenheping at gmail.com>
This module automatically inflates/deflates DateTime objects
corresponding to applicable columns. Columns may also be
defined to specify their nature, such as columns representing a
creation time (set at time of insertion) or a modification time
(set at time of every update).
- Avoid to use http://tokyocabinet.sourceforge.net/ as distfiles [1]
PR: ports/132648 [1]
Submitted by: Gea-Suan Lin <gslin AT gslin.org>
Approved by: maintainer implicitly
It is a base class for ResultSets providing just one method: recur-
sive_update which works just like update_or_create but can recursively
update or create data objects composed of multiple rows. All rows need
to be identified by primary keys - so you need to provide them in the
update structure (unless they can be deduced from the parent row - for
example when you have a belongs_to relationship). If not all colums
comprising the primary key are specified - then a new row will be cre-
ated, with the expectation that the missing columns will be filled by
it (as in the case of auto_increment primary keys).