specified by the freedesktop "Desktp Entry" specification.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/File-DesktopEntry/
PR: ports/98259
Submitted by: Jose Alonso Cardenas Marquez <acardenas@bsd.org.pe>
(also ports/98273 by Alexander Botero-Lowry)
Approved by: lawrance (mentor, implicit)
a self-written server) to be run as a daemon and to be controlled by
simple start/stop/restart commands.
If you want, you can also use daemons to run blocks of ruby code in a
daemon process and to control these processes from the main application.
Besides this basic functionality, daemons offers many advanced features
like exception backtracing and logging (in case your ruby script
crashes) and monitoring and automatic restarting of your processes if
they crash.
WWW: http://daemons.rubyforge.org/
PR: ports/97531
Submitted by: Rui Lopes <rgl@ruilopes.com>
load them as additional features to use in your software. It
originated from the Mongrel (http://mongrel.rubyforge.org/) project
but proved useful enough to break out into a separate project.
WWW: http://mongrel.rubyforge.org/gem_plugin_rdoc/
PR: ports/97532
Submitted by: Rui Lopes <rgl@ruilopes.com>
This module implements yet another damn configuration-file system.
The configuration language is deliberately simple and limited, and the
module works hard to preserve as much information (section order,
comments, etc.) as possible when a configuration file is updated.
See Chapter 19 of "Perl Best Practices" (O'Reilly, 2005) for the
rationale for this approach.
The configuration language is a slight extension of the Windows INI
format.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Config-Std/
Approved by: krion (mentor)
Most programmers who use Perl's object-oriented features construct their
objects by blessing a hash. But, in doing so, they undermine the
robustness of the OO approach. Hash-based objects are unencapsulated:
their entries are open for the world to access and modify.
Objects without effective encapsulation are vulnerable. Instead of
politely respecting their public interface, some clever client coder
inevitably will realize that it's marginally faster to interact directly
with the underlying implementation, pulling out attribute values
directly from the hash of an object.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Class-Std/
Approved by: krion (mentor)
Rename this ports to use the real vendor package name. The advantage of this
is to allow our users' keyword search works and easier for users to file the
Bugzilla report when they use our name of ports. Debian, Gentoo, NetBSD and
other OSs have the correct package name, but not in our ports tree.
My team, FreeBSD GNOME Team, have agreed with it.
As for x11-toolkits/py-gnome2, chase the rename.
Rename this ports to use the real vendor package name. The advantage of this
is to allow our users' keyword search works and easier for users to file the
Bugzilla report when they use our name of ports. Debian, Gentoo, NetBSD and
other OSs have the correct package name, but not in our ports tree.
My team, FreeBSD GNOME Team, have agreed with it.
As for other ports, chase the rename.
PR: ports/97985
Repocopy by: marcus
Rename this ports to use the real vendor package name. The advantage of this
is to allow our users' keyword search works and easier for users to file the
Bugzilla report when they use our name of ports. Debian, Gentoo, NetBSD and
other OSs have the correct package name, but not in our ports tree.
My team, FreeBSD GNOME Team, have agreed with it.
PR: ports/97985
Repocopy by: marcus
Rename this ports to use the real vendor package name. The advantage of this
is to allow our users' keyword search works and easier for users to file the
Bugzilla report when they use our name of ports. Debian, Gentoo, NetBSD and
other OSs have the correct package name, but not in our ports tree.
My team, FreeBSD GNOME Team, have agreed with it.
As for x11/gnome2 chase the rename.
PR: ports/97985
Repocopy by: marcus
is to allow our users' keyword search works and easier for users to file the
Bugzilla report when they use our name of ports. Debian, Gentoo, NetBSD and
other OSs have the correct package name, but not in our ports tree.
My team, FreeBSD GNOME Team, have agreed with it.
As for deskutils/superswitcher, devel/configgen and devel/gnome2-hacker-tools,
chase the rename.
PR: ports/97985
Repocopy by: marcus
is to allow our users' keyword search works and easier for users to file the
Bugzilla report when they use our name of ports. Debian, Gentoo, NetBSD and
other OSs have the correct package name, but not in our ports tree.
My team, FreeBSD GNOME Team, have agreed with it.
PR: ports/97985
Repocopy by: marcus
Ruby on Rails framework.
The goal of this project is to provide Rails developers
with everything they need to develop, manage,
test and deploy their applications.
Features include source control, debugging, WEBrick servers,
generator wizards, syntax highlighting, data tools and much much more.
The RadRails IDE is built on the Eclipse RCP, and includes the
Subclipse plug-in and the RDT plug-ins.
The RadRails tools are also available as Eclipse plug-ins.
WWW: http://www.radrails.org/
Submitted by: Alexander Novitsky
Perl bindings to the 2.x series of the GtkSpell graphical user interface
library. This module allows you to write perl applications that utilize the
GtkSpell library for mis-spelled word highlighting.
WWW: http://gtk2-perl.sourceforge.net/
PR: ports/94848
Submitted by: Jose Alonso Cardenas Marquez <acardenas@bsd.org.pe>
Approved by: krion (mentor)
new constructor, that is to check for attributes existence, and definedness.
Authors: GomoR <netpkt@gomor.org>
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Class-Gomor/
PR: ports/97424
Submitted by: Christopher Boumenot <boumenot@gmail.com>
applications with transparent object/method access from the client to the
server. Network communication is optionally encrypted using IO::Socket::SSL.
Several event loop managers are supported due to an extensible API. Currently
Event and Glib are implemented.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Event::RPC/
PR: ports/97350
Submitted by: Vivek Khera <vivek@khera.org>