fix minor documentation issues with the portsclean(1) manpage.
1. In the SYNOPSIS, the -L option is excluded.
2. In the description for the -Q option, an example of the -QQ option
is not given and since the other descriptions do this,
it looks nicer and is easier to read.
PR: ports/82666
Submitted by: KOMATSU Shinichiro <koma2@lovepeers.org> (maintainer)
Pointed out by: Jason E. Hale <jhale@bluebottle.com>
Doodle is a tool to quickly search the documents on a computer. Doodle
builds an index using meta-data contained in the documents and allows
fast searches on the resulting database. Doodle uses libextractor to
support obtaining meta-data from various file-formats. The database
used by doodle is a suffix tree, resulting in fast lookups. Doodle
supports approximate searches.
WWW: http://gnunet.org/doodle/
Submitted by: Tom McLaughlin <tmclaugh@sdf.lonestar.org>, myself
- Adds OPTIONS, if you don't want to use OPTIONS define -DBATCH
and vlc will use your knobs and auto-detect your ports.
New Knobs:
WITH_DAAD libopendaap itunes music shares
WITHOUT_OGG Disabled ogg audio decoder
WITH_TWOLAME Twolame Mpeg layer 2 audio Support
WITH_DIRAC dirac general-purpose video codec
WITH_SMB SAMBA Access module
Patches and Most changes merged from: multimedia/vlc-devel [1]
Directly install libraries into a port-specific location instead of
moving them there after the original installation. This is simpler
and also avoids the problem where the port would overwrite/remove an
existing copy of libiberty.a, which boils down to a true conflict.
working version.
In light of the recent X11BASE <-> LOCALBASE discussion I chose to revert
back to install into LOCALBASE until a final decission is made.
Noticed by: Jakob Breivik Grimstveit <jakob@grimstveit.no>
Approved by: short maintainer timeout; duty to fix bugs I introduce
the the cad/linux-gid port, but it doesn't adds a dependency to linux-gid,
since tochnog can be used standalone.
The right thing to do would be to add a slave port which installs the
plugins only. The slave port would have to depend upon linux-gid and
tochnog.
Since the linux-gid port installs now in X11BASE and tochnog installs in
LOCALBASE, we have a plist problem ATM too.
In light of the recent discussion about the right base directory for ports
which use X11 bits I decided to go the quick route until everything is
decided:
- move linux-gid back to LOCALBASE
- let tochnog still install the plugins
This reverts back to the status quo (a working tochnog/linux-gid). Someone
with a good asbestos suite may want to mark the tochnog port BROKEN.
Dependencies explained by: pfgshield-freebsd@yahoo.com
moving them there after the original installation. This is simpler
and also avoids the problem where the port would overwrite/remove an
existing copy of libiberty.a, which boils down to a true conflict.
1. Upgrade to the latest version, 2.0.1
2. Convert to rc.d style startup/shutdown script
3. Improve permissions on /var/db/nut
Download pgp signature file for the tarball.
PR: ports/81591
Submitted by: Dmitry A Grigorovich
fltk-config --ldflags. libm is needed when linking against libfltk.
This fixes OpenOffice build with fltk installed.
PR: 82551
Submitted by: Mike Durian <durian@shadetreesoftware.com>
Gnome application for writing CD-Audio discs. It aims for simplicity,
usability and compability. Its features are:
o Supports multiple formats files, like WAV, MP3, OGG, FLAC and every other
gstreamer does
o Save and open PLS, M3U and XSPF playlists
o Extracts audio from video contents, like an MPEG video
o Uses audio metadata for better handling
o Supports drag and drop: drop musics directly from Rhythmbox or Nautilus!
o Clean and easy to use interface
o Easy integration with other applications
WWW: http://s1x.homelinux.net/projects/serpentine
There is probably a better way for handling os.statfs on FreeBSD than the way
I did, but this works. Patches welcome =)
requiring 1.1.3 or 1.1.4 (the program requires zlib >= 1.1.3, which
was imported in January 1999) [1]
- Refactor pkg-plist as PLIST_FILES/PORTDOCS
- Polish the Makefile
[1]:
PR: ports/82524
Submitted by: Andrew McNaughton <andrew@scoop.co.nz>
The description is "Monta Method reproduced in web" ... seems
to be a presentation technique originating from Japanese
television.
PR: ports/82215
Submitted by: TAKAHASHI Kaoru <kaoru@kaisei.org>