Better support /who and /whereis.
Divert server messages to the server window instead of the channel window.
Bump PKGREVISION to 8.
Compile-tested only.
VideoLAN is a project of French students from the Ecole
Centrale Paris and developers from all over the world. Its main
goals is MPEG streaming on a network, but it also features a
standalone multimedia player. The VideoLAN Server can stream
video read from a hard disk, a DVD player, a satellite card or
an MPEG 2 compression card, and unicast or multicast it on a
network. The VideoLAN Client can read the stream from the
network and display it. It can also be used to display video
read locally on the computer : DVDs, VCDs, MPEG and DivX files
and from a satellite card. It is multi-plaform : Linux,
Windows, Mac OS X, BeOS, BSD, Solaris, QNX, iPaq... The
VideoLAN Client and Server now have a full IPv6 support.
VideoLAN is a project of French students from the Ecole
Centrale Paris and developers from all over the world. Its main
goals is MPEG streaming on a network, but it also features a
standalone multimedia player. The VideoLAN Server can stream
video read from a hard disk, a DVD player, a satellite card or
an MPEG 2 compression card, and unicast or multicast it on a
network. The VideoLAN Client can read the stream from the
network and display it. It can also be used to display video
read locally on the computer : DVDs, VCDs, MPEG and DivX files
and from a satellite card. It is multi-plaform : Linux,
Windows, Mac OS X, BeOS, BSD, Solaris, QNX, iPaq... The
VideoLAN Client and Server now have a full IPv6 support.
sybperl includes four modules: Sybase::DBlib, Sybase::CTlib,
Sybase::BCP and Sybase::Sybperl. The first two implement a thin
wrapper around the Sybase DB-Library and Client Library APIs,
respectively. Sybase::BCP is a specialty module aimed at doing
Bulk-Copy operations, and Sybase::Sybperl is a compatibility module
with sybperl 1.xx (i.e. with the perl 4.x version).
The sybperl modules are thin wrappers around the Sybase APIs. This is
both good and bad. It's good because you have greater control, and
because the API is (obviously) close to the way the server and the
protocol work. It's bad in that it's a proprietary API, and that it is
somewhat verbose.
Sqsh (pronounced skwish) is short for SQshelL (pronounced s-q-shell), it
is intended as a replacement for the venerable 'isql' program supplied
by Sybase. It came about due to years of frustration of trying to do
real work with a program that was never meant to perform real work.
Sqsh is much more than a nice prompt, it is intended to provide much of
the functionality provided by a good shell, such as variables,
redirection, pipes, back-grounding, job control, history, command
completion, and dynamic configuration. Also, as a by-product of the
design, it is remarkably easy to extend and add functionality.
This package enables X11 support.
Sqsh (pronounced skwish) is short for SQshelL (pronounced s-q-shell), it
is intended as a replacement for the venerable 'isql' program supplied
by Sybase. It came about due to years of frustration of trying to do
real work with a program that was never meant to perform real work.
Sqsh is much more than a nice prompt, it is intended to provide much of
the functionality provided by a good shell, such as variables,
redirection, pipes, back-grounding, job control, history, command
completion, and dynamic configuration. Also, as a by-product of the
design, it is remarkably easy to extend and add functionality.
This package enables X11 support.
Many changes were made from previous packaged version, 0.6.3; Lots of
improvements and bug fixes, including security ones. Please take a look
at its WWW page for more detailes.
http://www.shiro.dreamhost.com/scheme/gauche/
pkgsrc changes:
- support buildlink2. buildlink3.mk is also added but not tested since
I have not moved to buildlink3 environment yet.
- this package now uses libgcudevel/boehm-gc instead of self contained,
slightly modified one. It seems that this package runs under m68k.
** Bug fixes
mv could mistakenly fail to preserve hard links when moving two
or more arguments between partitions.
`cp --sparse=always F /dev/hdx' no longer tries to use lseek to create
holes in the destination.
nohup now sets the close-on-exec flag for its copy of the stderr file
descriptor. This avoids some nohup-induced hangs. For example, before
this change, if you ran `ssh localhost', then `nohup sleep 600 </dev/null &',
and then exited that remote shell, the ssh session would hang until the
10-minute sleep terminated. With the fixed nohup, the ssh session
terminates immediately.
`expr' now conforms to POSIX better:
Integers like -0 and 00 are now treated as zero.
The `|' operator now returns 0, not its first argument, if both
arguments are null or zero. E.g., `expr "" \| ""' now returns 0,
not the empty string.
The `|' and `&' operators now use short-circuit evaluation, e.g.,
`expr 1 \| 1 / 0' no longer reports a division by zero.
** New features
`chown user.group file' now has its traditional meaning even when
conforming to POSIX 1003.1-2001, so long as no user has a name
containing `.' that happens to equal `user.group'.
From the changelog:
* Add an error handler for the case where a POP3 server returns a message
that isn't even close to valid 822 format, particularly one where the
first line in the message header is a continuation line (starts with
whitespace).
Unfortunately, Ruby has problem with thread library even if recent
release of 1.8.1. So, a program using ruby's library shouldn't link
with thread library.
Bump PKGREVISION.
been set to if it hadn't been overridden by PKG_SYSCONFDIR.<pkg>. This
can be used in /etc/mk.conf to re-override certain PKG_SYSCONFDIR.<pkg>
in /etc/mk.conf from various package Makefiles, e.g.
PKG_SYSCONFDIR.openssl= ${DFLT_PKG_SYSCONFDIR}
PKG_SYSCONFDIR.tcp_wrappers= ${DFLT_PKG_SYSCONFDIR}
pkgsrc changes:
o provide GKRELLM_DEBUG to easily build a debug version (should help with
the spinning gkrellm issue)
o don't strip binaries in debug mode
o small gkrellm Makefiles fixes
GKrellM changes (from Changelog):
o Stephan Kapfinger <s.kapfinger--at--gmx.de> mail.c patch fixes bug
I introduced into the last release where parsing of the mail reader
command could fail.
include:
* Better error-handling.
* Support for Courier-IMAP authdaemond for plaintext password verification.
* Fixed resource leaks and buffer overruns.
pkgsrc changes include:
* SASL_DBTYPE is either "ndbm" or "berkeley" and sets the db format of the
sasldb authentication database, defaulting to ndbm.
* SASLSOCKETDIR is the location of the saslauthd socket directory.
* AUTHDAEMONVAR is the localt of the authdaemond socket directory.
* SASL_ENTROPY_SOURCE is a file of random bytes used as a PRNG.
This closes PR 24649 and PR 24694.
from BUILDLINK_PACKAGES, which is built up by including buildlink[23].mk
files in the package's Makefile), and for each dependency, if it's
already installed, then automatically include the buildlink[23].mk
file for that dependency.
This means that for any package, the dependencies are taken to be the
union of the dependency information as laid out in /usr/pkgsrc and
the dependency information of installed packages stored in /var/db/pkg.
This handle situations where an installed package has _more_ dependencies
than the package as it exists in pkgsrc. This can occur, e.g., if
you build databases/gnome-libs with BDB_DEFAULT=db4, and then you
decide that you'd rather build other packages using the native Berkeley
DB, so you remove that setting from your environment. You'd still
like for your packages that depend on gnome-libs to also depend on
db4, but the pkgsrc Makefiles no longer reflect that dependency.
environment, it creates a Makefile fragment that is included within
bsd.buildlink3.mk that contains all of the buildlink3 variable
definitions that we want to pass to make(1) invocations on the same
package Makefile. Change the make variables that are only relevant
for the current package to use BUILDLINK_VARS instead of MAKEFLAGS.
This avoids overflowing the command line with lots of extra arguments.