amount of work by the FreeBSD GNOME Team and our testers.
On top of the usual GNOME update, we have taken this opportunity to move
GNOME from X11BASE to LOCALBASE. This means roughly 600 ports NOT part of
the GNOME Desktop also need to be changed. The bulk of the move was carried
out by ahze, mezz, and pav, but it would not have been possible without
cooperation from the FreeBSD KDE team who worked with us to make sure
GNOME and KDE can still coexist happily. We would also like to send a
shout out to kris and pointyhat for putting up with multiple test runs
until we got something that was solid.
Back to GNOME 2.16. This release brings a huge amount of new functionality
to FreeBSD. The standard release notes can be read at
http://www.gnome.org/start/2.16/ . But on top of what you will read there,
jylefort and marcus have completed work on a port of HAL to FreeBSD. This
will allow FreeBSD to take advantage of closer hardware interaction such
as auto-mounting CD-ROMs, USB drives, and music players; auto-playing
audio CDs; and managing laptop power consumption.
But where would this all be without our loyal testers and contributors?
Therefore, the FreeBSD GNOME team would like to thank the following users:
Phillip Neumann <pneumann@gmail.com>
tmclaugh
mux
Yuri Pankov <yuri.pankov@gmail.com>
chinsan
Thomas <freebsdlists@bsdunix.ch>
Brian Gruber <knightbg@yahoo.com>
Franz Klammer <klammer@webonaut.com>
Dominique Goncalves <dominique.goncalves@gmail.com>
Pascal Hofstee <caelian@gmail.com>
Yasuda Keisuke <kysd@po.harenet.ne.jp>
backyard <backyard1454-bsd@yahoo.com>
Andris Raugulis <endrju@null.lv> <endrju@null.lv>
Eric L. Chen <d9364104@mail.nchu.edu.tw>
Pawel Worach <pawel.worach@gmail.com>
QuiRK on #freebsd-gnome
Shane Bell <decept0@gmail.com>
luigi
sajd on #freebsd-gnome
sat
Chris Coleman <chrisc@vmunix.com>
kaeru on #freebsd-gnome
crsd_ via irc.freenode.org/#FreeBSD-GNOME
Joel Diaz <joeldiaz@mac.com>
Enjoy!
Approved by: portmgr (implicit, kris)
- makes 3.1.x series up-to-date
- makes it work correctly on amd64
This is not the patch submitted in ports/104280. Submitter confirms the
vendor patch works well.
PR: ports/104280
Submitted by: Dan Ponte <dcp1990 at neptune.atopia.net>
Approved by: portmgr (erwin), David Le Brun <david at dyn-ns.net> (maintainer)
A new version of Herrie is available for download. It includes a lot of
fixes, but also support for LibAO.
PR: ports/104253
Submitted by: maintainer (Ed Schouten)
- Use new EFL framework
- Update all e17 ports to the lates stable cvs snapshot
- Add additional knobs/options to ports makefiles to control the
feature set
- Add a bunch of new e17 applications/libraries
- Minor improvements/modification.
Approved by: vanilla (old maintainer), sem (mentor)
Aqualung is a music player. It plays audio files from your filesystem
and has the feature of inserting no gaps between adjacent tracks.
WWW: http://aqualung.sourceforge.net/
This is a library to make it easy to manipulate RDF files describing LADSPA
plugins.
It can also be used for general RDF manipulation.
It can read RDF/XLM and N3 files and export N3 files, it also has a light
taxonomic inference capablility.
WWW: http://sourceforge.net/projects/lrdf/
Oggz provides a simple programming interface for reading and writing
Ogg files and streams. Ogg is an interleaving data container developed
by Monty at Xiph.Org, originally to support the Ogg Vorbis audio
format.
liboggz supports the flexibility afforded by the Ogg file format while
presenting the following API niceties:
* Strict adherence to the formatting requirements of Ogg bitstreams,
to ensure that only valid bitstreams are generated
* A simple, callback based open/read/close or open/write/close interface
to raw Ogg files
* A customisable seeking abstraction for seeking on multitrack Ogg data
* A packet queue for feeding incoming packets for writing, with
callback based notification when this queue is empty
* A means of overriding the IO functions used by Oggz, for easier
integration with media frameworks and similar systems.
* A handy table structure for storing information on each logical
bitstream
WWW: http://www.annodex.net/software/liboggz/html/
channels with different rate codecs and several people on each channel.
Primarily aimed at team gamers but can be used as an IP phone as well.
WWW: http://www.ventrilo.com/
PR: ports/95071
Submitted by: Anish Mistry <amistry@am-productions.biz>
The biggest change is that the database is now MySQL instead of SQLite.
Slimserver starts it's own MySQL instance so you don't need to deal with
MySQL configuration, but both the client and server are now
dependencies. For more info see the change log at:
http://www.slimdevices.com/Changelog6.html
Most of the binary perl modules are now port dependencies. YAML-Syck is
not yet because it didn't work. I suspect a version issues (the ports
version is newer).
David Shultz kindly added me to PAUSE as a module co-maintainer.
Since this port depends on File::Temp now, drop all vestiges of support
for Perl 5.005.