Percona Toolkit is a collection of advanced command-line tools used by Percona
support staff to perform a variety of MySQL and system tasks that are too
difficult or complex to perform manually, including:
Verify master and replica data consistency
Efficiently archive rows
Find duplicate indexes
Summarize MySQL servers
Analyze queries from logs and tcpdump
Collect vital system information when problems occur
AnyEvent::CouchDB is a non-blocking CouchDB client implemented on top of the
AnyEvent framework. Using this library will give you the ability to run many
CouchDB requests asynchronously, and it was intended to be used within a
Coro+AnyEvent environment. However, it can also be used synchronously if you
want.
Its API is based on jquery.couch.js, but we've adapted the API slightly so that
it makes sense in an asynchronous Perl environment.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/AnyEvent-CouchDB/
Dancer::Plugin::Redis provides an easy way to obtain a connected Redis
database handle by simply calling the 'redis' keyword within a Dancer
application.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Dancer-Plugin-Redis/
PR: ports/160346
Submitted by: Grzegorz Blach <magik@roorback.net>
RMySQL is a database interface and MySQL driver for R. This version
complies with the database interface definition as implemented in
the package DBI 0.2-2.
WWW: http://biostat.mc.vanderbilt.edu/wiki/Main/RMySQL
A database interface (DBI) definition for communication between R
and relational database management systems. All classes in this
package are virtual and need to be extended by the various R/DBMS
implementations.
WWW: http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/DBI/
2011-09-01 astro/spacechart: Abandonware
2011-09-01 audio/adpcm: No more public distfiles
2011-09-01 audio/aube: Abandonware
2011-09-01 audio/festvox-aec: BROKEN for more than 6 month
2011-09-01 audio/gtkgep: Abandonware
2011-09-01 audio/gtkhirad: No more public distfiles
2011-09-01 audio/opmixer: No more upstream
2011-09-01 audio/swami: Abandonware
2011-09-01 audio/x11amp: Abandonware
2011-09-01 audio/xmms-sndstretch: No Master Site
2011-09-01 cad/linux-gid: No more public distfiles
2011-09-01 chinese/gbscript: No more public distfiles
2011-09-01 chinese/mplayer-fonts: No more public distfiles
2011-09-01 chinese/oxford: No more public distfiles
2011-09-01 chinese/vflib: No more public distfiles
2011-09-01 databases/mysql++: No more public distfiles
2011-09-01 databases/mysql_last_value: No Master Site
2011-09-01 databases/p5-DBIx-Table: No more public distfiles
http://download.oracle.com/docs/cd/E17076_02/html/installation/changelog_5_2.html
- Remove databases/db51 (no hard dependencies), users having set db51
manually for their ports need to set db5 and rebuild dependent ports.
- Add OPTIONS for localization (default off) and crypto (default on).
- Install libdb*-5.so symlinks into $PREFIX/lib
- If WITH_DEBUG is set, pass --enable-umrw to pacify valgrind, and
--enable-debug.
2011-08-03 comms/ruby-serialport: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 databases/ruby-search-namazu: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 databases/ruby-sqlite: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 databases/rubygem-kirbybase: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 devel/ruby-eet: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 devel/ruby-filelock: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 devel/ruby-filemagic: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 devel/ruby-metaruby: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 devel/ruby-poll: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 devel/ruby-rrb: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 devel/ruby-strongtyping: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 devel/ruby-textbuf: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 graphics/ruby-graph: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 graphics/ruby-libpng: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 japanese/ruby-kakasi: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 lang/ruby-extensions: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 lang/ruby-lua: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 lang/ruby-perl: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 mail/ruby-tmail: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 math/ruby-bitset: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 math/ruby-bitvector: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 math/ruby-gmp: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 net/ruby-mpi: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 net/ruby-nis: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 net/ruby-pcap: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 net/ruby-romp: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 net/ruby-spread: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 print/ruby-pdflib: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 security/ruby-aes: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 security/ruby-blowfish: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 security/ruby-cast_256: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 security/ruby-mcrypt: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 security/ruby-pam: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 sysutils/ruby-log4r: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 textproc/ruby-csv: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 textproc/ruby-formvalidator: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 textproc/ruby-gdome: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 textproc/ruby-htmltools: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 textproc/ruby-nqxml: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 textproc/ruby-quixml: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 textproc/ruby-raspell: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 textproc/ruby-tempura: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 textproc/ruby-xtemplate: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 www/ruby-tmpl: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-01 benchmarks/rawio: Looks like an abandonware, no more public distfiles
2011-08-01 benchmarks/tmetric: Looks like abandonware, no more public distfiles
2011-08-01 biology/L-Breeder: Looks like an abandonware, no more public distfile
2011-08-01 biology/crimap: Looks like an abandonware, no more public distfile
2011-08-01 biology/distribfold: No more upstream, looks like an abandonware
2011-08-01 biology/kinemage: Looks like an abandonware, no more public distfile
2011-08-01 biology/lsysexp: Looks like an abandonware, no more public distfile
2011-08-01 chinese/chm2html: Looks like an abandonware, no more public distfile
2011-08-01 chinese/ntuttf: No more public distfiles available
2011-08-01 chinese/reciteword: Looks like an abandonware, no more public distfile
2011-08-01 chinese/tocps: No more pulic distfiles
2011-08-01 chinese/xttmgr: Looks like an abandonware, no more public distfile
2011-08-01 comms/mserver: Looks like an abandonware, no more public distfiles
2011-08-01 comms/qicosi: Looks like an abandonware, no more public distfile
2011-08-01 comms/sms_client: Looks like an abandonware, no more public distfile
2011-08-01 comms/smstools: Looks like an abandonware, no more public distfile
2011-08-01 converters/siconv: Looks like an abandonware, no more public distfiles
2011-08-01 converters/utf8conv: Looks like an abandonware, no more public distfile
2011-08-01 databases/pgcluster: Looks like an abandonware, no more public distfile
2011-08-01 databases/py-MySQL: Please use databases/py-MySQLdb instead
2011-08-01 databases/py-SQLDict: Looks like an abandonware, no more public distfile
2011-08-01 databases/py-rrdpipe: Looks like an abandonware, no more public distfile
2011-08-01 databases/sybase_ase: no more public distfiles available
Development of an open-source solution for asynchronous, master-master
replication of relational databases that is
- ridiculously easy to use
- database independent
Currently supports PostgreSQL and MySQL.
WWW: http://www.rubyrep.org/
PR: ports/158605
Submitted by: Eirik Oeverby <ltning@anduin.net>
Redis 2.2.11 with support for Lua scripting, backported from the
scripting branch. Instructions about how to use it are contained
in following blog post:
http://antirez.com/post/scripting-branch-released.html
Connect to build.
Add CONFLICTS and bump PORTREVISION for databases/redis.
AnyEvent::BDB is an AnyEvent user, you need to make sure that you use and run a
supported event loop.
Loading this module will install the necessary magic to seamlessly integrate BDB
into AnyEvent, i.e. you no longer need to concern yourself with calling
BDB::poll_cb or any of that stuff (you still can, but this module will do it in
case you don't).
The AnyEvent watcher can be disabled by executing undef $AnyEvent::BDB::WATCHER.
Please notify the author of when and why you think this was necessary.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/AnyEvent-BDB/
This is the Cache::Memcached compatible interface to libmemcached, a C library
to interface with memcached.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Cache-Memcached-libmemcached/
PR: ports/157939
Submitted by: Dmitry Liakh <dliakh@ukr.net>
It is a fairly faithful, low level library that implements
most of the MySQL client API.
WWW: https://github.com/mailrank/mysql
PR: ports/157264
Submitted by: Jyun-Yan You <jyyou@cs.nctu.edu.tw>
This module is for reading and writing a common variation of character
separated data.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Text-xSV/
PR: ports/157937
Submitted by: Dmitry Liakh <dliakh@ukr.net>
minimal wrapper around Sqlite3's C interface which is designed to give the
developer access to all of Sqlite3's features in a way that is convenient
for Pure programmers.
WWW: http://docs.pure-lang.googlecode.com/hg/pure-sql3.html
PR: ports/156103
Submitted by: Zhihao Yuan <lichray at gmail.com>
It provides support for parsing, splitting and formatting SQL statements.
WWW: http://code.google.com/p/python-sqlparse/
PR: ports/156828
Submitted by: Roland van Laar <roland at micite.net>
Ruby client for memcached supporting advanced
protocol features and pluggable architecture.
WWW: http://github.com/ninjudd/memcache
PR: ports/153453
Submitted by: Mikhail T. <michael at fun-box.ru>
as well as including some utility scripts for managing views and attachments.
WWW: http://rubygems.org/gems/couchrest
PR: ports/158129
Submitted by: Mike Carlson (carlson39 at llnl.gov)
into rails3 and thus behave like a rails framework component.
Just like activerecord does in rails, dm-rails uses the railtie
API to hook into rails. The two are actually hooked into rails
almost identically.
Creating new datamapper apps on rails3 from scratch is actually
really easy. The following will guide you through the process.
WWW: http://rubygems.org/gems/dm-rails
PR: ports/157994
Submitted by: Ryan Steinmetz <rpsfa at rit.edu>
based on the original Paperclip by Jon Yurek at Thoughtbot
WWW: http://rubygems.org/gems/dm-paperclip
PR: ports/157989
Submitted by: Ryan Steinmetz <rpsfa at rit.edu>
lacking in functionality) dm-pager is a new, fresh, and feature
rich pagination implementation for DataMapper. Due to Github's gem
builder being destroyed, we were forced to rename our gem to
'dm-pager' which is now available on Gemcutter.org.
WWW: https://github.com/visionmedia/dm-pagination
PR: ports/157988
Submitted by: Ryan Steinmetz <rpsfa at rit.edu>
many models. This is similar to observers in ActiveRecord.
WWW: https://github.com/datamapper/dm-observer
PR: ports/157985
Submitted by: Ryan Steinmetz <rpsfa at rit.edu>
See http://www.postgresql.org/about/news.1313 for more info.
Also, use USERS knob instead of explicitally creating the pgsql user
while still accepting alternative names, using [1] with some added
magic.
PR: 157667 [1]
Upgrade to version 5.2.6 [1]
Bring default compilation options into line with standard mariadb releases,
per http://kb.askmonty.org/v/generic-build-instructions [1]
Submitted by: maintainer [1]
Approved by: maintainer
You can customize the way data are presented in a very simple way.
The ideal tool to edit your personal databases or to browse data
of an application you're developing with other languages/tools.
Filtering data has never been so easy, no SQL knowledge required.
WWW: http://sqlkit.argolinux.org/
2011-05-01 audio/dap: Upstream disapear and distfile is no more available
2011-05-01 audio/gdrdao: Upstream disapear and no more distfiles available
2011-05-01 databases/gmysql: Upstream disapear and distfile is no more available
2011-05-01 deskutils/kuake: Upstream disapear and distfile is no more available
2011-05-01 finance/xinvest: Outdated, abandoned
2011-05-01 finance/xquote: Outdated, abandoned
2011-05-01 french/plgrenouille: Upstream disapear and distfile is no more available
2011-04-17 cad/tclspice: has been broken for more than a year
2011-04-17 comms/hcfmdm: does not compile on 7.X or higher
2011-04-17 databases/mysqlcc: has been broken for almost a year
2011-04-17 devel/ruby-rjudy: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 devel/xfc: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 devel/lamson: has been broken for a half year
2011-04-17 devel/cocktail: does not build on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 devel/djgpp-gcc: has been broken for half a year
2011-04-17 devel/gauche-sdl: has been broken for a year
2011-04-17 devel/gdb53-act: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x and up
2011-04-17 editors/zed: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 games/aqbubble: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 graphics/libvisual-plugins: has been broken for 3 years
2011-04-17 japanese/roundcube: has been broken for almost a year
2011-04-17 japanese/tkstep80: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 lang/u++: has been broken for over a half year
2011-04-17 lang/pugs: has been broken for over a year
2011-04-17 lang/mozart: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 math/linalg: does not build on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 math/R-cran-igraph: has been broken for over a half year
2011-04-17 misc/ftree: has been broken for over a half year
2011-04-17 multimedia/katchtv: has been broken for a half year
2011-04-17 multimedia/libomxil-bellagio: has been broken for almost a year
2011-04-17 multimedia/banshee-mirage: has been broken for over a half year
2011-04-17 net-p2p/trackerbt: has been broken for a half year
2011-04-17 net/cap: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 net/ggsd: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 net/b2bua: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 net/penguintv: has been broken for a half year
2011-04-17 news/openftd: has been broken for almost a year
2011-04-17 palm/romeo: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 science/pcp: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 science/elmer-fem: has been broken for over a year
2011-04-17 security/newpki-lib: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 security/newpki-server: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 security/xmlsec: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 security/f-protd: has been broken for over a year
2011-04-17 sysutils/xwlans: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 www/bk_edit: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x and newer
2011-04-17 www/bricolage: has been broken for a half year
2011-04-17 x11-toolkits/gauche-gtk: has been broken for a year
2011-04-17 x11-toolkits/gambas2-gb-qt: has been broken for over a year
2011-04-17 x11-toolkits/php-gtk2: has been broken for over a half year
2011-04-17 x11-toolkits/p5-Tcl-Tk: has been broken for 2 year
2011-04-17 x11/metisse: has been broken for over a half year
storage of BLOBS.
The storage path is specified with fs_column_path. Each file receives
a unique name, so the storage for all FS columns can share the same
path.
Within the path specified by fs_column_path, files are stored in
sub-directories based on the first 2 characters of the unique file
names. Up to 256 sub-directories will be created, as needed. Override
_fs_column_dirs in a derived class to change this behavior.
fs_new_on_update will create a new file name if the file has been
updated.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/DBIx-Class-InflateColumn-FS/
2011-04-01 accessibility/linux-f8-atk: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 archivers/linux-f8-ucl: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 archivers/linux-f8-upx: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 audio/linux-f8-alsa-lib: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 audio/linux-f8-arts: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 audio/linux-f8-esound: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 audio/linux-f8-freealut: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 audio/linux-f8-libaudiofile: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 audio/linux-f8-libogg: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 audio/linux-f8-libvorbis: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 audio/linux-f8-mikmod: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 audio/linux-f8-nas-libs: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 audio/linux-f8-openal: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 audio/linux-f8-sdl_mixer: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 databases/linux-f8-sqlite3: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-02 databases/postgresql81-server: EOL see http://wiki.postgresql.org/wiki/PostgreSQL_Release_Support_Policy
2011-04-02 databases/postgresql73-server: EOL see http://wiki.postgresql.org/wiki/PostgreSQL_Release_Support_Policy
2011-04-02 databases/postgresql74-server: EOL see http://wiki.postgresql.org/wiki/PostgreSQL_Release_Support_Policy
2011-04-02 databases/postgresql80-server: EOL see http://wiki.postgresql.org/wiki/PostgreSQL_Release_Support_Policy
2011-04-01 devel/linux-f8-libglade: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 devel/linux-f8-sdl12: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 devel/linux-f8-allegro: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 devel/linux-f8-libsigc++20: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 devel/linux-f8-libglade2: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 devel/linux-f8-nspr: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 dns/linux-f8-libidn: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 emulators/linux_base-f8: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 emulators/linux_base-f9: End of Life since Jul 10, 2009
2011-04-01 emulators/linux_base-fc6: End of Life since December 7, 2007
2011-04-01 emulators/linux_base-f7: End of Life since June 13, 2008
2011-04-01 ftp/linux-f8-curl: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 graphics/linux-f8-sdl_image: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 graphics/linux-f8-ungif: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 graphics/linux-f8-imlib: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 graphics/linux-f8-cairo: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 graphics/linux-f8-dri: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 graphics/linux-f8-gdk-pixbuf: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 graphics/linux-f8-jpeg: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 graphics/linux-f8-png: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 graphics/linux-f8-libGLU: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 graphics/linux-f8-libmng: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 graphics/linux-f8-png10: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 graphics/linux-f8-tiff: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 lang/linux-f8-libg2c: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 lang/linux-f8-tcl84: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 multimedia/linux-f8-libtheora: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-02 net-p2p/dcd: No fetch sources and looks like project abandoned
2011-03-31 net/straw: abandoned upstream and does not work with python 2.6+
2011-04-01 security/linux-f8-libssh2: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 security/linux-f8-nss: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 security/linux-f8-openssl: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 textproc/linux-f8-libxml2: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 textproc/linux-f8-scim-gtk: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 textproc/linux-f8-scim-libs: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 textproc/linux-f8-expat: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 textproc/linux-f8-libxml: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 textproc/linux-f8-aspell: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 www/linux-f8-flashplugin10: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-03-30 www/mediawiki112: abandoned upstream
2011-03-30 www/mediawiki113: abandoned upstream
2011-03-30 www/mediawiki114: abandoned upstream
2011-03-30 www/mediawiki16: abandoned upstream
2011-04-01 x11-fonts/linux-f8-fontconfig: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-03-01 x11-themes/gnome-icons-cool-gorilla: "no mastersite"
2011-04-01 x11-themes/linux-f8-hicolor-icon-theme: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 x11-toolkits/linux-f8-gtk: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 x11-toolkits/linux-f8-gtk2: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 x11-toolkits/linux-f8-openmotif: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 x11-toolkits/linux-f8-pango: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 x11-toolkits/linux-f8-qt33: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 x11-toolkits/linux-f8-tk84: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
2011-04-01 x11/linux-f8-xorg-libs: End of Life since Jan 7, 2009
nested tree model is a way of representing hierarchical information in
a database. This takes a different approach to the Adjacency List
implementation. (see DBIx::Class::Tree::AdjacencyList which uses
parent relationships in a recursive manner).
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/DBIx-Class-Tree-NestedSet/
adjacency list model is a very common way of representing a tree
structure. In this model each row in a table has a prent ID column
that references the primary key of another row in the same table.
Because of this the primary key must only be one column and is usually
some sort of integer. The row with a parent ID of 0 is the root node
and is usually the parent of all other rows. Although, there is no
limitation in this module that would stop you from having multiple
root nodes.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/DBIx-Class-Tree/
what GDBM is for other languages: a fast, simple persistence engine.
You can use it to store a mix of objects and BLOBs, and all updates are done
in a transactionally safe manner. JDBM also provides scalable data structures,
such as HTree and B+Tree, to support persistence of large object collections.
JDBM2 provides HashMap and TreeMap which are backed by disk storage.
It is very easy and fast way to persist your data.
JDBM2 also have minimal hardware requirements and is highly embeddable.
WWW: http://code.google.com/p/jdbm2/
2011-02-04 databases/qt-ibase-plugin: Port is broken on all supported versions of FreeBSD
2011-02-04 devel/ace+tao: Outdated and does not compile on any supported version of FreeBSD
2011-02-04 graphics/ray++: Does not compile on supported versions of FreeBSD
2011-02-04 japanese/oleo: Does not compile on supported versions of FreeBSD
2011-02-04 lang/dylan: does not build
2011-02-04 multimedia/jahshaka: Does not compile on supported versions of FreeBSD
Feature safe: yes
It is minimalistic because it just adds minimal support for the protocol,
but at the same time it uses an high level printf-alike API in order to make
it much higher level than otherwise suggested by its minimal code base and
the lack of explicit bindings for every Redis command.
Apart from supporting sending commands and receiving replies, it comes with
a reply parser that is decoupled from the I/O layer. It is a stream parser
designed for easy reusability, which can for instance be used in higher
level language bindings for efficient reply parsing.
Hiredis only supports the binary-safe Redis protocol, so you can use it with
any Redis version >= 1.2.0.
The library comes with multiple APIs. There is the synchronous API, the
asynchronous API and the reply parsing API.
WWW: https://github.com/antirez/hiredis
PR: ports/153535
Submitted by: Grzegorz Blach <magik at roorback.net>
Feature safe: yes
It is a Web and Web services based application for reporting, data analysis
(OLAP UI and server) and data integration.
WWW: http://jasperforge.org/projects/jasperserver
PR: ports/150208
Submitted by: Jason Helfman
Feature safe: yes
databases as a single cluster.
WWW: http://projects.2ndquadrant.com/repmgr
PR: ports/154074
Submitted by: Alexander Pyhalov <alp@sfedu.ru>
Feature safe: yes
Redis::hiredis is a simple wrapper around Salvatore Sanfilippo's hiredis C
client that allows connecting and sending any command just like you would
from a command line Redis client.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Redis-hiredis/
PR: ports/153536
Submitted by: Grzegorz Blach <magik@roorback.net>
Feature safe: yes
You can easily dump your data into a backup file and - if needed - restore it.
It is especially suited for shared hosting webspaces, where you don't
have shell access. MySQLDumper is an open source project and released
under the GNU-license.
WWW: http://www.mysqldumper.net/
PR: ports/153811
Submitted by: Marek Holienka <marekholienka@gmail.com>
Feature safe: yes
2010-12-30 databases/p5-sqlrelay: broken and upstream disapeared
2010-12-30 devel/php-dbg2: No upstream support
2010-12-30 dns/fourcdns: upstream has disapeared
2010-12-31 emulators/win4bsd: Development has ceased and distfile is no longer available
2010-12-31 french/mozilla-flp: www/seamonkey port is deprecated. Consider using the www/firefox-i18n.
2010-12-31 french/xtel: Minitel services will be discontinued at the end of 2010.
2010-12-30 ftp/ftpq: upstream has disapeared
2010-12-30 graphics/paintlib: does not compile with new tiff and no more maintained upstream
2010-12-30 graphics/g3dviewer: does not build with gcc 4.2, upstream disapeared
2010-12-30 lang/scriba: Does not compile with gcc 4.2+, looks like abandonware
2010-12-30 math/rascal: Broken on every arch since 2008, looks like an abandonware
2010-12-31 net-mgmt/nrg: Project has vanished. Use cacti instead.
2010-12-31 security/hostsentry: Project is dead.
2010-12-31 sysutils/kcube: Project has vanished
2010-12-31 www/cybercalendar: has been unmaintained since 2001 and is unusable with dates after 2010 (see ports/150974)
2010-12-31 www/flock: Flock 3 moves from Firefox to Chromium
2010-12-31 www/linux-flock: Flock 3 moves from Firefox to Chromium
2010-12-30 x11-clocks/xtu: Looks like abandonware
Leave java/tya in for now, as it has outstanding PRs.
Major changes:
- new installation layout, resembling RPM packages:
- client = Client Utilities + Development Libraries + Shared components
- server = MySQL Server + Embedded
- new build system: cmake instead of autotools
- fewer port knobs
Expect various breakages, but if we are lucky this could become the new default
mysql port.
Riak is a Dynamo-inspired key/value store that scales predictably and easily.
Riak also simplifies development by giving developers the ability to quickly
prototype, test, and deploy their applications. A truly fault-tolerant system,
Riak has no single point of failure. No machines are special or central in
Riak, so developers and operations professionals can decide exactly how
fault-tolerant they want and need their applications to be.
WWW: https://github.com/basho/riak-python-client
PR: ports/153342
Submitted by: TJ Ninneman <tj@harperdog.com>
SQL::Abstract. Declare 'use SQL::Abstract::Plugin::InsertMulti;' with
'use SQL::Abstract;', exporting insert_multi() and update_multi()
methods to SQL::Abstract namespace from
SQL::Abstract::Plugin::InsertMulti.
Plugin system is depends on 'into' options of Sub::Exporter.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/SQL-Abstract-Plugin-InsertMulti/
handle by simply calling the database keyword within your Dancer application.
Returns a Dancer::Plugin::Database::Handle object, which is a subclass of DBI's
DBI::db connection handle object, so it does everything you'd expect to do with
DBI, but also adds a few convenience methods. See the documentation for
Dancer::Plugin::Database::Handle for full details of those.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Dancer-Plugin-Database
language for relational databases. The target audience for HTSQL is the
accidental programmer -- one who is not a SQL expert, yet needs a usable,
comprehensive query tool for data access and reporting.
WWW: http://htsql.org/
MyBatis is a first class persistence framework with support for custom
SQL, stored procedures and advanced mappings. MyBatis eliminates almost
all of the JDBC code and manual setting of parameters and retrieval of
results. MyBatis can use simple XML or Annotations for configuration and
map primitives, Map interfaces and Java POJOs (Plain Old Java Objects)
to database records.
WWW: http://www.mybatis.org/
retrieve data. It does this by using a table called __Store__. Once connected
to a database, it will detect if this table is missing and create it if
necessary.
When writing data to the store, the data (a HASH reference) is first
serialized using JSON and then inserted/updated via DBIx::Class to (currently)
an SQLite backend.
Retrieving data from the store is done by key lookup or by searching an
SQL-based index. Once found, the data is deserialized via JSON and returned.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/DBIx-NoSQL/
provide a library with a high level of usability, good interal error
handling and to emulate similar libraries available for other languages
to provide an easy migration of MySQL based systems into the Go language.
WWW: https://github.com/Philio/GoMySQL
DBIx::Class::ResultSource right into your attribute definitions and will
automatically call it when it finds an add_column attribute option. It also
replaces the DBIx::Class-generated accessor methods (these are
Class::Accessor::Grouped-generated accessor methods under the hood) with the
Moose-generated accessor methods so that you can use more of the wonderful
powers of Moose (eg. type constraints, triggers, ...).
MariaDB is a database server that offers drop-in replacement functionality for
MySQL1. MariaDB is built by some of the original authors of MySQL, with
assistance from the broader community of Free and open source software
developers. In addition to the core functionality of MySQL, MariaDB offers a
rich set of feature enhancements including alternate storage engines, server
optimizations, and patches.
MariaDB is primarily driven by developers at Monty Program, a company founded by
Michael "Monty" Widenius, the original author of MySQL, but this is not the
whole story about MariaDB. On the "About MariaDB" page you will find more
information about all participants in the MariaDB community, including storage
engines XtraDB and PBXT.
WWW: http://mariadb.org/
PR: ports/152237
Submitted by: Artyom Olshevskiy <siasiamail@gmail.com>
in dBase-format (dbf) databases from within PHP.
WWW: http://pecl.php.net/package/dbase
PR: ports/151633
Submitted by: toomas aas <toomas at median.ee>
many database servers. The resolution algorithm is extensible and
pluggable, because of this you can make custom strategy module easily.
This module can retrieve DBI's database handle object or connection
information (data source, user, credential...) by labeled name and
treat same cluster consists many nodes as one labeled name, choose
fetching strategy.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/DBIx-DBHResolver/
connection and transaction management. Connecting to a database can
be expensive; you don't want your application to re-connect every time
you need to run a query. The efficient thing to do is to hang on to a
database handle to maintain a connection to the database in order to
minimize that overhead. DBIx::Connector lets you do that without
having to worry about dropped or corrupted connections.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/DBIx-Connector/
Also, try to break the previous 1:1 relation between FreeBSD system and
PostgreSQL versions installed. Use different PREFIX:es to install
different versions on the same system.
PR: ports/132402, ports/145002, ports/146657
which can be used to create XML output directly from MySQL
using a single SQL query. This prevents having to convert a
MySQL result to XML in a PHP script, Ruby script, etc.
The library provides the same functionality as SQL/XML, seen
in MS SQL server and Oracle. However it uses normal functions.
By using subqueries the same results as SQL/XML can be generated.
WWW: http://www.mysqludf.org/lib_mysqludf_xql/index.php
PR: ports/142086
Submitted by: Mina R Waheeb <syncer at gmail.com>
SQL queries in the regular C++ code, staying entirely within the Standard C++.
The idea is to provide C++ programmers a way to access SQL databases in the most
natural and intuitive way. If you find existing libraries too difficult for your
needs or just distracting, SOCI can be a good alternative.
WWW: http://soci.sourceforge.net/
PR: ports/150527
Submitted by: Julien Laffaye <kimelto at gmail.com>
2010-09-05 databases/sqlite-ext-inet: Please install databases/sqlite-ext-mobigroup instead
2010-08-31 devel/codeville: Dead project.
2010-08-07 editors/koffice-kde4-l10n-fy
2010-08-07 editors/koffice-kde4-l10n-hne
2010-06-14 graphics/xaralx-devel: Does not compile with png-1.4 and latest version is from Aug 2006
2010-06-14 graphics/xaralx: Does not compile with png-1.4 and latest version is from Aug 2006
2010-04-01 misc/kde4-l10n-bn_IN
2010-04-01 misc/kde4-l10n-hne
2010-04-01 misc/kde4-l10n-ku
2010-04-01 misc/kde4-l10n-mr
not going to be updated by the maintainer.
Remove conflicts that no longer apply in databases/mongodb.
PR: ports/148966
Submitted by: wxs@
Approved by: ivoras@ (maintainer of databases/mongodb-devel)
an ORM which is fast, thread-safe and feature rich.
Please Welcome 1.0.0
http://datamapper.org/
PR: ports/147800
Submitted by: myself (pgollucci)
Sponsored by: RideCharge Inc. / TaxiMagic
supports transactional SQL query requests in a multithreaded
architecture. For high availablility requirements, Cego supports a
database shadowing feature. Several compute nodes can be defined in
a Cego database configuration, where each node is able to manage a
number of so called table sets. For each tableset, a backup node
can be defined, which runs is recover mode for the corresponding
tableset. If required, the tableset can be switched to the backup
node and this node gets the active node for the tableset.
Many more details are available at:
WWW: http://www.lemke-it.com/
PR: ports/147822
Submitted by: Kurt Jaeger <fbsd-ports at opsec.eu>
Feature safe: yes
network protocol traffic over TCP/IP networks.
mysqlsniffer is coded in C using the pcap library and works with MySQL version
4.0 and newer. mysqlsniffer is the only MySQL-specific network sniffer.
WWW: http://hackmysql.com/mysqlsniffer
PR: ports/147079
Submitted by: Frederic Hardy <frederic.hardy at mageekbox.net>
compatible / memcached, and has more features(as follows):
* persistent storage (you can use flare as persistent memcached)
* pluggable storage (currently only Tokyo Cabinet is available, though:)
* data replication (synchronous or asynchronous)
* data partitioning (automatically partitioned according to # of master
servers (clients do not have to care about it))
* dynamic reconstruction, and partitioning (you can dynamically (I mean,
without any service interruption) add slave servers and partition
master servers)
* node monitoring and failover (if any server is down, the server is
automatically isolated from active servers and another slave server
is promoted to master server)
* request proxy (you can always get same result regardless of servers
you connect to. so you can think flare servers as one big key-value
storage)
* over 256 bytes keys, and over 1M bytes values are available
WWW: http://labs.gree.jp/Top/OpenSource/Flare-en.html
support of Percona extensions.
PR: ports/145144 [1], ports/144939 [2]
Submitted by: Alex Samorukov <samm@os2.kiev.ua> [1],
Aleksandr Kuzminsky <aleksandr.kuzminsky@percona.com> [2]
2010-02-20 databases/mysql-connector-java50: Old version: please use databases/mysql-connector-java instead
2010-04-15 databases/p5-DBIx-Class-HTML-FormFu: This module is obsoleted by www/p5-HTML-FormFu-Model-DBIC
2010-04-29 devel/py-rbtree: "does not build with new pyrex and it's not active maintained"
2010-04-08 devel/tavrasm: No longer maintained, use devel/avra instead
2010-04-27 mail/postfix23: it's no longer maintened by upstream developer
2010-04-30 math/libgmp4: Use math/gmp instead.
2010-04-04 misc/ezload: does not build with new USB stack in 8-STABLE
2010-01-31 misc/gkrellmbgchg: use misc/gkrellmbgchg2
2010-03-04 multimedia/kbtv: no longer under development by author
2010-02-16 net/plb: broken; abandoned by author; use net/relayd or www/nginx instead
2010-04-30 security/vpnd: This software is no longer developed
2010-03-15 textproc/isearch: abandoned upstream, uses an obsolete version of GCC, not used by any other port
2010-04-02 www/caudium12: No longer maintained upstream, please switch to www/caudium14
2010-03-08 www/p5-Catalyst-Plugin-Cache-FileCache: Deprecated by module author in favor of www/p5-Catalyst-Plugin-Cache
applications. It is a community-driven project based on the popular
MySQL DBMS and focused on MySQL's original goals of ease-of-use,
reliability and performance.
WWW: http://drizzle.org/wiki/Main_Page
system, generic in nature, but intended for use in speeding up dynamic
web applications by alleviating database load.
WWW: http://www.danga.com/memcached/
New memcached versions (1.4.x) have broken several site installations
so this port will provide compatibility for sites that still rely on
memcached 1.2.x.
a persistent key-value database with built-in net interface written
in ANSI-C for Posix systems.
It is a fork of alfonsojimenez's phpredis, adding many methods and
fixing a lot of issues.
WWW: http://github.com/owlient/phpredis/
PR: ports/145711
Submitted by: Benedikt Niessen <ports at niessen.ch>
object-oriented way.
One class (the Model class) defines your connection to the database
(eg: connectionstring, username and password) and your other classes
define interaction with one table each (your entity classes).
The Entity classes subclass the Model class and automatically inherit
its connection.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Class-DBI-Lite/
The server, drizzled, will use this as for protocol library. Client
utilities and any new projects that require low-level protocol
communication (like proxies). Other language interfaces (PHP
extensions, Python DBI, Perl DBD, SWIG, ...) should be built off
of this library.
WWW: https://launchpad.net/libdrizzle
The goal of the pg_rman project is providing a method for online
backup and PITR as easy as pg_dump. Also, it maintains a backup
catalog per database cluster. Users can maintain old backups including
archive logs with one command.
WWW: http://code.google.com/p/pg-rman/
Feature safe: yes
is to create an ORM which is fast, thread-safe and feature-rich.
WWW: http://datamapper.org
PR: ports/143517
Submitted by: Jyun-Yan You <jyyou at cs.nctu.edu.tw>
with OpenNMS, this is the preferred version for use as is offers better
performance
WWW: http://www.opennms.org/wiki/IPLIKE
PR: ports/142581
Submitted by: Sevan Janiyan <venture37 at geeklan.co.uk>
and Visual FoxPro .dbf files (including memos).
Currently supports dBase III, and FoxPro - Visual FoxPro 6 tables.
Text is returned as unicode, and codepage settings in tables are
honored. Documentation needs work, but author is very responsive
to e-mails.
WWW: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/dbf/
and "SHOW VARIABLES LIKE..." then attempts to produce
sane recommendations for tuning server variables.
It is compatible with all versions of MySQL 3.23 - 5.1.
WWW: https://launchpad.net/mysql-tuning-primer
PR: ports/140641
Submitted by: Joe Horn <joehorn at gmail.com>
databases using mysqldump.
Features:
- Backup mutiple databases
- Single backup file or to a seperate file for each DB
- Compress backup files
- Backup remote servers
- E-mail logs
WWW: https://sourceforge.net/projects/autobackupmysql
PR: ports/141846
Submitted by: Frank Wall <fw at moov.de>
All code, at first, is written in pure Python so that py-postgresql will work
anywhere that you can install Python 3. Optimizations in C are made where
needed, but are always optional.
Prepared Statements
Using the PG-API interface, protocol-level prepared statements may be created
and used multiple times. db.prepare(sql)(*args)
COPY Support
Use the convenient COPY interface to directly copy data from one connection to
another. No intermediate files or tricks are necessary.
Arrays and Composite Typescw
Arrays and composites are fully supported. Queries requesting them will returns
objects that provide access to the elements within.
"pg_python" Quick Console
Get a Python console with a connection to PostgreSQL for quick tests and simple
scripts.
WWW: http://python.projects.postgresql.org/
PR: ports/137782
Submitted by: Volodymyr Kostyrko <c.kworr@gmail.com>
another database (with same schema) at any time. Use as a constant
dataset for running tests against or for populating development
databases when impractical to use production clones. Describe fixture
set using relations and conditions based on your DBIx::Class schema.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/DBIx-Class-Fixtures/
databases/pgpool-II-22 and upgrade databases/pgpool-II to 2.3.
- Record $CONFLICTS each other.
Please note upgrade from 2.2.6 to 2.3 causes small incompatibility
(read NEWS file in distribution).
the Mongo database from Python. The pymongo package is a native
Python driver for the Mongo database. The gridfs package is a
gridfs implementation on top of pymongo.
WWW: http://github.com/mongodb/mongo-python-driver
schema-free, document-oriented database. A common name in the
"NOSQL" community.
WWW: http://www.mongodb.org/
PR: ports/140257 [1]
ports/140144 [2]
ports/140489 [2]
Submitted by: Ivan Voras <ivoras@FreeBSD.org> [1]
Mirko Zinn <mail@derzinn.de> [2]
schema-free, document-oriented database. A common name in the
"NOSQL" community.
WWW: http://www.mongodb.org/
PR: ports/140144 [1]
ports/140257 [2]
ports/140489 [1]
Submitted by: Mirko Zinn <mail@derzinn.de> [1]
Ivan Voras <ivoras@FreeBSD.org> [2]
The 'pg' module is the newer module, that has been greatly improved, and
is almost a complete rewrite. It is not backwards compatible. Use this module
for newly written code. It should be more stable, less buggy, and has more
features.
LICENSE: BSD or GPL2
WWW: http://rubyforge.org/projects/ruby-pg/
Once FreeBSD 8.0 ships, I'll update all the USE knobs that are
necessary to allow other ports to make use of this port.
PR: ports/138831
Submitted by: Gea-Suan Lin <gslin@gslin.org>
Approved by: portmgr@
It encapsulates many web conventions in the generated UIs as default
behaviours. For example, email addresses are by default rendered as
mailto links in tables and appropiate validation is enforced
automatically in forms. These behaviours are highly extensible.
Renderer uses CGI::FormBuilder to generate forms and the Google Chart
API to render charts. Template::Toolkit is used for template processing,
however, Renderer can dynamically generate a full set of UIs without
any templates.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Rose-DBx-Object-Renderer
sits on top of a powerful database abstraction layer (DBAL).
One of its key features is the option to write database queries in a
proprietary object oriented SQL dialect called Doctrine Query
Language (DQL), inspired by Hibernate's HQL. This provides developers
with a powerful alternative to SQL that maintains flexibility without
requiring unnecessary code duplication.
WWW: http://www.doctrine-project.org/
Feature safe: yes
This version support git version 0.08 or later of Redis available at
git://github.com/antirez/redis
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Redis/
PR: ports/138951
Feature safe: yes
Submitted by: Gea-Suan Lin <gslin at gslin.org>
and contacts with your google account.
WWW: http://code.google.com/p/libgcal/
PR: ports/137996
Submitted by: Troels Kofoed Jacobsen <tkjacobsen at gmail.com>
files into a human-readable form. You can format/dump the files
several ways as well as dumping straight binary. This utility is
intended to aid in the understanding of the internal contents of a
PostgreSQL block.
WWW: http://sources.redhat.com/rhdb/utilities.html
structured key-value store. Cassandra brings together the distributed
systems technologies from Dynamo and the data model from Google's
BigTable. Like Dynamo, Cassandra is eventually consistent. Like
BigTable, Cassandra provides a ColumnFamily-based data model richer
than typical key/value systems.
Cassandra was open sourced by Facebook in 2008, where it was designed
by one of the authors of Amazon's Dynamo. In a lot of ways you can
think of Cassandra as Dynamo 2.0. Cassandra is in production use at
Facebook but is still under heavy development.
WWW: http://incubator.apache.org/cassandra/
PR: ports/137477
Submitted by: Gea-Suan Lin <gslin at gslin.org>
South is:
* Intelligent; it knows if you've missed out a migration or two
* Database independent, so there's no hassle if you need to move databases.
* Easy; it can write migrations for you, and it takes about a minute to
convert your app over to use South.
* Designed for a pluggable Django world; you can declare dependencies
between apps so they all migrate together correctly, and you can still
use syncdb for your non-migrated apps without it interfering.
* Useful for data too; you can write migrations to transform legacy data.
* Better (we think, anyway) than the alternatives.
WWW: http://south.aeracode.org/
PR: ports/137234
Submitted by: Stanislav Svirid <count at 211.ru>
by MySQL. It is the highly anticipated successor application of the
DBDesigner4 project.
5.2 branch still in Alpha stage
WWW: http://dev.mysql.com/workbench/
PR: ports/136088 (part 2 of 2)
Submitted by: Maxim Ignatenko
by MySQL. It is the highly anticipated successor application of the
DBDesigner4 project.
WWW: http://dev.mysql.com/workbench/
PR: ports/136088 (part 1 of 2)
Submitted by: Maxim Ignatenko
After many years of development, PostgreSQL has become feature-complete in many areas.
This release shows a targeted approach to adding features (e.g., authentication,
monitoring, space reuse), and adds capabilities defined in the later SQL standards.
The major areas of enhancement are:
Windowing Functions
Common Table Expressions and Recursive Queries
Default and variadic parameters for functions
Parallel Restore
Column Permissions
Per-database locale settings
Improved hash indexes
Improved join performance for EXISTS and NOT EXISTS queries
Easier-to-use Warm Standby
Automatic sizing of the Free Space Map
Visibility Map (greatly reduces vacuum overhead for slowly-changing tables)
Version-aware psql (backslash commands work against older servers)
Support SSL certificates for user authentication
Per-function runtime statistics
Easy editing of functions in psql
New contrib modules: pg_stat_statements, auto_explain, citext, btree_gin
URL: http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.4/interactive/release-8-4.html