Commit graph

4 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
agc
03010d7bd0 Add SHA512 digests for distfiles for print category
Problems found locating distfiles:
	Package acroread7: missing distfile AdobeReader_enu-7.0.9-1.i386.tar.gz
	Package acroread8: missing distfile AdobeReader_enu-8.1.7-1.sparc.tar.gz
	Package cups-filters: missing distfile cups-filters-1.1.0.tar.xz
	Package dvidvi: missing distfile dvidvi-1.0.tar.gz
	Package lgrind: missing distfile lgrind.tar.bz2

Otherwise, existing SHA1 digests verified and found to be the same on
the machine holding the existing distfiles (morden).  All existing
SHA1 digests retained for now as an audit trail.
2015-11-04 01:01:30 +00:00
markd
62a4ba308b Update to texlive 2015.
pdfTEX: Support JPEG Exif as well as JFIF; do not even emit a warning if
 \pdfinclusionerrorlevel is negative; sync with xpdf 3.04.
LuaTEX: New library newtokenlib for scanning tokens; bug fixes in the normal
 random number generator and other places.
XeTEX: Image handling fixes; xdvipdfmx binary looked for first as a sibling
 to xetex; internal XDV opcodes changed.
MetaPost: New numbersystem binary; new Japanese-enabled upmpost and
 updvitomp programs, analogous to up*tex.
Infrastructure: The fmtutil script has been reimplemented to read
 fmtutil.cnf on a per-tree basis, analogous to updmap. Web2C mktex* scripts
 (including mktexlsr, mktextfm, mktexpk) now prefer programs in their own
 directory, instead of always using the existing PATH.
2015-06-14 12:50:00 +00:00
markd
af2c47da42 Update tex-cjk{,-doc} to 4.8.3
latest texlive version.  changes unknown.
2015-04-22 10:26:50 +00:00
minskim
5e45c6f80e Import tex-cjk-4.8.2 as print/tex-cjk.
CJK is a macro package for LaTeX, providing simultaneous support for
various Asian scripts in many encodings (including Unicode): Chinese
(both traditional and simplified), Japanese, Korean, and Thai. A
special add-on feature is an interface to the Emacs editor
(cjk-enc.el) which gives simultaneous, easy-to-use support to a bunch
of other scripts in addition to the above: Cyrillic, Greek,
Latin-based scripts, Russian, and Vietnamese.
2011-10-19 23:41:53 +00:00