plfonts.dtx:
- Fixed issue of $a^\mathrm{b}, a_\mathrm{b}$.
- Support \reDeclareMathAlphabet as a rubust sequence.
tascmac.sty:
- Several issues of itembox and screen environment fixed.
ptex:
- Fix uninitialized variable issue.
[pt]lto[tp]f:
- Fix handling of section 16 in kanji map.
PR: ports/128828
In this game you control an ant that can walk along platformt that
are connected with ladders. On those platforms are dominos that
need to fall according to some rules.
WWW: http://pushover.sourceforge.net/
No PORTREVISION bump necessary since port simply won't build if
WITH_IMAGEMAGICK is defined.
PR: 126790
Submitted by: lioux@
Approved by: maintainer timeout
Note:
Fix a crash bug when modperl was loaded on some arches
PERL_SYS_INIT3 was added to modperl in r1155-1158 to fix modperl on arches like
hppa. This added an invalid cast which caused a segfault.
If you have:
const char *pArgv[];
Then pArgv will point to the same memory location as &pArgv. This pointer was
then casted to (char ***) which is one level of pointers too much for this
pointer.
Thanks to an anonymous reporter who pointed out the crash.
Thanks to pippijin for helping me understand the C++ magic.
Reported by: Elvis Stansvik <elvstone@gmail.com>
discs. Currently it is comprised of libraries named libisofs,
libburn, libisoburn, a cdrecord emulator named cdrskin, and an
integrated multi-session tool named xorriso.
WWW: http://libburnia-project.org/
PR: ports/128795
Submitted by: J.R. Oldroyd <fbsd at opal.com>
discs. Currently it is comprised of libraries named libisofs,
libburn, libisoburn, a cdrecord emulator named cdrskin, and an
integrated multi-session tool named xorriso.
WWW: http://libburnia-project.org/
PR: ports/128794
Submitted by: J.R. Oldroyd <fbsd at opal.com>
interferometry. In addition to pure-python phasing,
calibration, imaging, and deconvolution code, this package
includes interfaces to MIRIAD (a Fortran interferometry
package) and HEALPix (a package for representing spherical
data sets), and some math/fitting routines from SciPy.
WWW: http://setiathome.berkeley.edu/~aparsons/aipy
PR: ports/128811
Submitted by: Wen Heping <wenheping at gmail.com>
this GPL'd suite of random number tests will be named "Dieharder". Using a
movie sequel pun for the name is a double tribute to George Marsaglia, whose
"Diehard battery of tests" of random number generators has enjoyed years of
enduring usefulness as a test suite.
The dieharder suite is more than just the diehard tests cleaned up and given a
pretty GPL'd source face in native C: tests from the Statistical Test Suite
(STS) developed by the National Institute for Standards and Technology (NIST)
are being incorporated, as are new tests developed by rgb. Where possible,
tests are parametrized and controllable so that failure, at least, is
unambiguous.
A further design goal is to provide some indication of *why* a generator fails
a test, where such information can be extracted during the test process and
placed in usable form. For example, the bit-distribution tests should
(eventually) be able to display the actual histogram for the different bit
n-tuplets.
Dieharder is by design extensible. It is intended to be the "Swiss army knife
of random number test suites", or if you prefer, "the last suite you'll ever
ware" for testing random numbers.
WWW: http://www.phy.duke.edu/~rgb/General/dieharder.php
PR: ports/128882
Submitted by: bf <bf2006a at yahoo.com>
algorithms for generating non-uniform pseudorandom variates as a library of C
functions designed and implemented by the ARVAG (Automatic Random VAriate
Generation) project group in Vienna, and released under the GNU Public License
(GPL). It is especially designed for situations where:
- a non-standard distribution or a truncated distribution is needed;
- experiments with different types of distributions are made;
- random variates for variance reduction techniques are used; or
- fast generators of predictable quality are necessary.
UNU.RAN provides generators that are superior in many aspects to those found in
quite a number of other libraries; however, due to its more sophisticated
programming interface, it might not be as easy to use.
It uses an object-oriented interface in which distributions and generators are
treated as independent objects, so that different methods for generating
non-uniform random variates may be chosen according to various criteria, such
as speed, quality, and variance reduction. It is flexible enough to permit
sampling from non-standard distributions, such as distributions that arise in
a model and can only be computed in complicated subroutines.
WWW: http://statmath.wu-wien.ac.at/unuran/
PR: ports/128883
Submitted by: bf <bf2006a at yahoo.com>