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
Add support for setting and getting linux module parameters.
Some minor improvements regarding the jiffies computation.
Submitted by: hselasky@ (maintainer)
X11 and Linux framebuffer front-end for VDR.
Plugin displays video and OSD in X/Xv/XvMC/VAAPI/VDPAU window,
Linux framebuffer/DirectFB/vidixfb or DXR3 card.
Support for local and remote frontends.
Built-in image and media player supports playback of most known
media files (avi/mp3/divx/jpeg/...), DVDs and radio/video streams
(http, rtsp, ...) directly from VDR.
FreeBSD Note: If you want to use VAAPI/VDPAU make sure the ffmpeg
and libxine ports are (re)built with the corresponding knobs turned on!
(make config in their port dirs.)
WWW: http://sourceforge.net/projects/xineliboutput/
UPnP/DLNA Plugin for Video Disk Recorder
This Plugins extends the VDR with the possibility to act as an UPnP/DLNA Media
Server (DMS). It will serve VDR's contents in the network to any UPnP-AV and
DLNA capable devices.
This still is an alpha version!
WWW: http://upnp.vdr-developer.org/
This PlugIn is a VDR implementation of the VTP (Video Transfer Protocol)
Version 0.0.3 (see file PROTOCOL) and a basic HTTP Streaming Protocol.
It consists of a server and a client part, but both parts are compiled together
with the PlugIn source, but appear as separate PlugIns to VDR.
The client part acts as a full Input Device, so it can be used in conjunction
with a DXR3-Card, XINE, SoftDevice or others to act as a working VDR
installation without any DVB-Hardware including EPG-Handling.
The server part acts as a Receiver-Device and works transparently in the
background within your running VDR. It can serve multiple clients and it can
distribute multiple input streams (i.e. from multiple DVB-cards) to multiple
clients using the native VTP protocol (for VDR-clients), or using the HTTP
protocol supporting clients such as XINE, MPlayer and so on. With XMMS or
WinAMP, you can also listen to radio channels over a HTTP connection.
WWW: http://streamdev.vdr-developer.org/
This VDR plugin is a MPEG2 decoder.
It can be used as an output device for the vdr. Possible output devices are
Xv, DirectFB, Vidix or a framebuffer.
WWW: http://softdevice.berlios.de/
This plugin extends the remote control capabilities of vdr.
The following remote control devices are supported:
(a) linux input device driver ('/dev/input/eventX', X=0,1,2,...)
(currently not supported on FreeBSD)
(b) keyboard (tty driver): /dev/console, /dev/ttyX
(c) TCP connection (telnet)
(d) LIRC
(e) some(?) FreeBSD uhid(4) devices (experimental support added by this port)
To use, add something like this to vdr_flags: '-Premote -h /dev/uhid0',
(re)start vdr, then the osd should ask you to configure the
remote by pressing the buttons you want to assign.
Note: If your remote is detected as a keyboard you'll have to
tell ukbd(4) to ignore it first by doing (as root) something like:
usbconfig add_dev_quirk_vplh 0x1241 0xe000 0 0xffff UQ_KBD_IGNORE
(and possibly unplug it for a moment or reset it via usbconfig,
0x1241 there is the vendor id, 0xe000 the product id of the
device, you can get yours by doing
usbconfig -d 1.2 dump_device_desc
and looking for idVendor and idProduct, -d 1.2 there corresponds
to ugen1.2 listed by usbconfig w/o args.)
You can check with:
usbconfig show_ifdrv
if the device is then listed as ugen...: uhid... you're good to go.
2nd note: If vdr cannot open your uhid device check it is not claimed
by xorg:
fstat |grep uhid
If it is you may need an xorg.conf(5) with manually defined
InputDevice sections for mouse and keyboard and
Option "AutoAddDevices" "False"
in the ServerFlags section.
And if for some reason you want to reassign the buttons on the
remote you can stop vdr and do:
touch /usr/local/etc/vdr/channels.conf
and/or remove uhid entries from
/usr/local/etc/vdr/remote.conf .
When you then start vdr again it should ask to configure the
remote again.
WWW: http://escape-edv.de/endriss/vdr
OSD Picture-in-Picture is a VDR PlugIn that displays the current channel
in a small box on the screen (default upper right corner). You can switch
up and down now, watching the progress of the previous channel in the box.
Quality is not too good yet, and only I-Frames are displayed.
WWW: http://projects.vdr-developer.org/projects/show/plg-osdpip
This plugin integrates multicast IPTV transport streams seamlessly into
VDR. You can use any IPTV channel like any other normal DVB channel for
live viewing, recording, etc. The plugin also features full section
filtering capabilities which allow for example EIT information to be
extracted from the incoming stream.
Currently the IPTV plugin has direct support for both multicast UDP/RTP
and unicast HTTP MPEG1/2 transport streams. Also a file input method is
supported, but a file delay must be selected individually to prevent
VDR's transfer buffer over/underflow. Therefore the file input should be
considered as a testing feature only.
IPTV plugin also features a support for external streaming applications.
With proper helper applications and configuration IPTV plugin is able to
display not only MPEG1/2 transport streams but also other formats like
MP3 radio streams, mms video streams and so on.
WWW: http://www.saunalahti.fi/~rahrenbe/vdr/iptv/
DVB Frontend Status Monitor is a VDR plugin that displays some signal
information parameters of the current tuned channel on OSD. You can zap
through all your channels and the plugin should be monitoring always the
right frontend. The transponder and stream information are also available
in advanced display modes.
WWW: http://www.saunalahti.fi/~rahrenbe/vdr/femon/
The 'control' plugin brings the ability to VDR to control
the whole OSD over a telnet client.
To reach this, 'control' listens on a network socket
(default is port 2002). If a client wants to connect, VDR
checks if that client is allowed to connect to VDR (see in
the documentation of VDR about the svdrphosts.conf file for
more info). If the connection is etablished, 'control'
sends the curent OSD state to the client. Also all key
strokes at the client side are redirected to VDR.
WWW: http://ricomp.de/vdr/down_en.html
This is quite the hammer approuch, but since I haven't found a nicer way
this will have to do.
PR: ports/155686
Submitted by: Kris Moore <kris@pcbsd.org>
Its user interface is similar to winamp or xmms.
features:
Last.fm scrobbler, D-Bus, Spectrum Analyzer, sample rate conversion,
streaming (MP3, Vorbis via IceCast/ShoutCast), projectm visualization,
device detection, MPRIS, global hotkey, video playback using Mplayer,
Bauer Stereophonic-to-Binaural DSP, projectM audio visulaliser,
lyrics (from LyricWiki.orig), and all skins for winamp and/or xmms
input plugins:
MPEG1 layer 1/2/3, Ogg Vorbis, native FLAC, Musepack, WavePack,
ModPlug, WMA (and other formats provided by FFmpeg library), PCM WAVE,
AAC, CD audio and CUE (including flac, WavPack embeded cue)
output plugins:
PulseAudio, OSS and Jack
WWW: http://qmmp.ylsoftware.com/
or http://code.google.com/p/qmmp/
PR: ports/154773
Submitted by: SimaMoto,RyoTa <liangtai.s4 at gmail.com>
Linux. It can easily combine multiple video clips, audio clips,
and images into a single project, and then export the video into
many common video formats.
OpenShot is a non-linear video editor, which means any frame of
video can be accessed at any time, and thus the video clips can
be layered, mixed, and arranged in very creative ways. All
video clip edits (trimming, cutting, etc...) are non-destructive,
meaning that the original video clips are never modified.
WWW: http://www.openshot.org/
PR: ports/155265
Submitted by: Charlie Kester <corky1951 at comcast.net>
Add more DVB-xxx drivers and manual pages.
Some minor bugfixes.
Add support for USB remote controls.
Submitted by: Hans Petter Selasky <hselasky@freebsd.org> (maintainer)
ports. All of them are End of Life (no security updates) since a loooong time.
As they are not the default, I decided to go with a short expiration date (one
month). The maintainer of the few ports which depend upon the f8 infrastructure
is informed to take action (update to the default f10 infrastructure, or to
deprecate).
support in webcamd svn (for mceusb-based receivers/transmitters and
USB DVB tuner remotes supported by the Linux code), and enable
support for a few more USB devices while we're at it tho of those
only an FTDI-based one was tested:
http://www.huitsing.nl/irftdi/ [1]
- Fix plist for audio/rhythmbox and multimedia/totem and
add missing LIRC_{CFLAGS,LIBS} variables to CONFIGURE_ENV for
multimedia/xine when building them with (optional) lirc support. [2]
- Chase liblirc_client shlib version bump for ports depdending on it
and bump PORTREVISIONs for ports depending on it by default.
Approved by: portmgr (miwi) [2]
Thanks to: Warren Block <wblock@wonkity.com> for testing [1]
Update Gstreamer-plugins-good to 0.10.27
Update Gstreamer-plugins-bad to 0.10.21
Update Gstreamer-plugins-ugly to 0.10.17
Add flite plugin. plugin for the flite Speech synthesis engine.
Add opencv plugin. plugin for opencv Computer vision library.
Move vdpau plugin to a beter category.
Remove LOCAL master sites that haven't been updated for ages.
Check if Gstreamer (core) is recent enough.
Remove 6.x BROKEN line for the bad plugin.
This fixes a security warning from portaudit.
Security: CVE-2009-1194
VuXML: 4b172278-3f46-11de-becb-001cc0377035
Thanks to: Luchesar V. ILIEV <luchesar.iliev@gmail.com> (F10+rpmbuild info)
MLT is an open source multimedia framework, designed and developed for
television broadcasting. It provides a toolkit for broadcasters, video
editors, media players, transcoders, web streamers and many more types
of applications. The functionality of the system is provided via an
assortment of ready to use tools, XML authoring components, and an
extensible plug-in based API.
WWW: http://www.mltframework.org
PR: ports/154565
Submitted by: Charlie Kester <corky1951 at comcast.net>
First select your photos, customize the motion path and render the
video. There are several output possibilities for VCD, SVCD, DVD
up to FULL-HD.
The effect of the slideshow is known as "Ken Burns". Comments of
the pictures are generated into a subtitle file. Furthermore an
audio file can be specified to setup the background musice for the
slide show.
WWW: http://www.photofilmstrip.org/1-1-Home.html
PR: ports/154547
Submitted by: Charlie Kester <corky1951 at comcast.net>
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