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This branch adds support for accessing multiple repositories inside one Trac
project and based on 0.12 development version of Trac.
Trac uses a minimalistic approach to web-based software project management.
Our mission; to help developers write great software while staying out of
the way. Trac should impose as little as possible on a team's established
development process and policies.
What is Trac?
* An integrated system for managing software projects
* An enhanced wiki
* A flexible web-based issue tracker
* An interface to the Subversion revision control system
At the core of Trac lies an integrated wiki and issue/bug database. Using
wiki markup, all objects managed by Trac can directly link to other
issues/bug reports, code changesets, documentation and files.
WWW: http://trac.edgewall.org/
PR: ports/134314
Submitted by: Alexey V. Degtyarev <alexey at renatasystems.org>
Moonshine leverages the Windows Media capabilities from Silverlight,
provided by the Moonlight browser plugin, and the Firefox web
browser framework to enable the playback of embedded Windows Media
content on the web and local files on a user's desktop.
Note: The desktop player doesn't work yet.
for bandwidth optimization while browsing famous video
sharing portals/websites like Youtube, Metacafe etc.
It helps you save bandwidth when a particular video is
requested more than once from the same network/machine.
WWW: http://www.cachevideos.com/
PR: ports/134116
Submitted by: Murilo Opsfelder <mopsfelder at gmail.com>
Trac doesn't provide a web services API, this module currently "fakes"
an RPC interface around Trac's webforms and the feeds it exports.
Because of this, it's somewhat more brittle than a true RPC client
would be.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Net-Trac/
PR: ports/134386
Submitted by: Gea-Suan Lin <gslin at gslin.org>
your favorite web-based applications. Much of what we used to
accomplish using an application running locally on our computers
is moving into the web browser. Thanks to advances in web technology,
these apps are increasingly powerful and usable. As a result,
applications like Gmail, Facebook and Google Docs are soaring
in popularity.
WWW: http://prism.mozilla.com
for HTML::TreeBuilder::XPath.
Currently, this module implements good enough methods
for work with Web::Scraper.
PR: ports/133780
Submitted by: TERAMOTO Masahiro <markun@onohara.to>
- Support for displaying smileys;
- HTML 4.0 entities (named entities and numerical entities);
- Automatic replacement of common text idioms by their corresponding symbols
(e.g. arrows, fractions, etc.);
- Simplified markup for single words: *this* /is/ _important_;
- Replace <name@domain> with "mailto:" links (obfuscated if needed)
(0.11 only - though that's now in Trac core);
- Replace \\... UNC paths with "file:///" links (0.11 only);
Each feature can be disabled individually if needed.
WWW: http://trac-hacks.org/wiki/WikiGoodiesPlugin
PR: ports/134120
Submitted by: Alexey V. Degtyarev <alexey at renatasystems.org>
around the standard J2EE components (Java,servlets,JSP).
It's features include:WikiMarkup/Structured Text,File attachments,
Templates support,Data storage,Security,Easy plugin interface for
writing your own additions,UTF-8 support,JavaServerPages-based,
Easy-ish installation, Page locking to prevent editing conflicts,
Support for Multiple Wikis,etc.
WWW: http://www.jspwiki.org/
PR: ports/134078
Submitted by: wenheping at gmail.com
to play media in a browser. It should work with all browsers
on Unix-ish systems (Linux, BSD, Solaris) and use the NS4 API
(Mozilla, Firefox, Opera, etc.).
WWW: http://kdekorte.googlepages.com/gecko-mediaplayer
PR: ports/134009
Submitted by: Alexander Logvinov <ports at logvinov.com>
Firefox 3.1 Beta 3 is based on the Gecko 1.9.1 rendering platform,
which has been under development for the past 9 months. Firefox 3.1
is an incremental release on the previous version with significant
changes to improve web compatibility, performance, and ease of use:
* Improved the new Private Browsing Mode.
* Improvements to web worker thread support.
* Improved performance and stability with the new TraceMonkey
JavaScript engine.
* New native JSON support.
* Improvements to the Gecko layout engine, including speculative parsing
for faster content rendering.
* Support for new web technologies such as the <video> and <audio> elements,
the W3C Geolocation API, JavaScript query selectors, CSS 2.1 and 3 properties,
SVG transforms and offline applications.
Thanks to: beat@, nox@, gahr@, Florian Smeets,
gzip-compression from the webserver.
If the response contains a header with 'Content-Encoding: gzip',
it decompresses the response in order to get the original
(uncompressed) content.
This module will help to reduce bandwith fetching webpages, if
supported by the webeserver. If the webserver does not support
gzip-compression, no decompression will be made.
This modules is a direct subclass of WWW::Mechanize and will
therefore support any methods provided by WWW::Mechanize.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/WWW-Mechanize-Gzip/
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.
aiming to help you efficiently communicate with the service
with programmatic ways.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/WWW-HatenaDiary/
PR: ports/133428
Submitted by: Masahiro Teramoto <markun at onohara.to>
Features:
* methods like GET/HEAD/POST/* via HTTP/1.1.
* HTTPS(SSL), Cookies, proxy, authentication(Digest, NTLM, Basic), etc.
* asynchronous HTTP request, streaming HTTP request.
* by contrast with net/http in standard distribution;
o Cookies support
o MT-safe
o streaming POST (POST with File/IO)
o Digest auth
o Negotiate/NTLM auth for WWW-Authenticate (requires net/htlm module)
o NTLM auth for Proxy-Authenticate (requires win32/sspi module)
o extensible with filter interface
o you dont have to care HTTP/1.1 persistent connection (httpclient cares instead of you)
* Not supported now
o Cache
o Rather advanced HTTP/1.1 usage such as Range, deflate, etc. (of course you can set it in header by yourself)
For more detail, see API document at dev.ctor.org/doc/httpclient/
WWW: http://raa.ruby-lang.org/project/httpclient/
Sponsored by: RideCharge Inc.
2009-03-26 www/drupal4-filemanager: Drupal 4.7.x is end-of-life since 200802. Please migrate to Drupal 6.x
2009-03-26 www/drupal4-gsitemap: Drupal 4.7.x is end-of-life since 200802. Please migrate to Drupal 6.x
2009-03-26 www/drupal4-i18n: Drupal 4.7.x is end-of-life since 200802. Please migrate to Drupal 6.x
2009-03-26 www/drupal4-nice_menus: Drupal 4.7.x is end-of-life since 200802. Please migrate to Drupal 6.x
2009-03-26 www/drupal4-taxonomy_access: Drupal 4.7.x is end-of-life since 200802. Please migrate to Drupal 6.x
2009-03-26 www/drupal4-textile: Drupal 4.7.x is end-of-life since 200802. Please migrate to Drupal 6.x
2009-03-26 www/drupal4: Drupal 4.7.x is end-of-life since 200802. Please migrate to Drupal 6.x
2009-03-31 www/squid26: The 2.6 series is no longer actively maintained by the Squid developers
2009-03-30 x11-themes/camaelon-nesedah: now included in camaelon
Mojomojo is a sort of content managment system, borrowing many concepts
from wikis and blogs. It allows you to maintain a full tree-structure
of pages, and to interlink them in various ways. It has full version
support, so you can always go back to a previous version and see what's
changed with an easy AJAX- based diff system. There are also a bunch of
other features like bult-in fulltext search, live AJAX preview of editing,
and RSS feeds for every wiki page.
To find out more about how you can use MojoMojo, please visit
http://mojomojo.org or read the installation instructions in
MojoMojo::Installation to try it out yourself.
(This was a massive piece of work... Let me know if you use it!)
HTML::GenToc generates anchors and a table of contents for
HTML documents. Depending on the arguments, it will insert
the information it generates, or output to a string, a separate file
or STDOUT.
While it defaults to taking H1 and H2 elements as the significant
elements to put into the table of contents, any tag can be defined
as a significant element. Also, it doesn't matter if the input
HTML code is complete, pure HTML, one can input pseudo-html
or page-fragments, which makes it suitable for using on templates
and HTML meta-languages such as WML.
Also included in the distrubution is hypertoc, a script which uses the
module so that one can process files on the command-line in a
user-friendly manner.
This module contains a number of functions for taking sets of URLs and
labels and creating suitably formatted HTML. These links are "smart"
because, if given the url of the current page, if any of the links in
the list equal it, that item in the list will be formatted as a special
label, not as a link; this is a Good Thing, since the user would be
confused by clicking on a link back to the current page.
intervals. Events will run during the first request which meets or
exceeds the specified time. Depending on the level of traffic to the
application, events may or may not run at exactly the correct time,
but it should be enough to satisfy many basic scheduling needs.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Catalyst-Plugin-Scheduler/
PR: ports/133074
Submitted by: Fernan Aguero <fernan at iib.unsam.edu.ar>
Instances of the HTTP::Daemon::SSL class are HTTP/1.1 servers
that listen on a socket for incoming requests.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/HTTP-Daemon-SSL/
PR: ports/132810
Submitted by: Mykola Marzhan <delgod at portaone.com>
highlighting for a wide range of languages.
WWW: http://drupal.org/project/geshifilter
PR: ports/132947
Submitted by: Eygene Ryabinkin <rea-fbsd at codelabs.ru>