Commit graph

5 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
minskim
a2cca7a03f Update eet to 1.2.0.
Changes:
	* Make use of eina.
	* Fix string in list and hash.
	* Fix array in eet_data.
	* Add crypto support to eet with OpenSSL.
	* Add GNUtls support to eet.
	* Make password callback work with GNUtls.
	* Add a function to retrieve raw signature.
	* Fix a corrupted pointer use in eet_cipher.c
	* Add some missing __UNUSED__ flags.
	* Fix problem reported by llvm
	* Add sha1 retrieval for an Eet_File.
	* Force fsync() after data is written to file, solve ext4 issues.
	* Disable fsync. Edit the code if you need it.
	* Make eet_data thread safe.
	* Fix eet pkg-config dependencies.
	* Fix double init of gcry.
	* Release eet 1.2.0
2009-06-10 06:40:11 +00:00
minskim
9c45e0c9e6 Update eet to 1.1.0.
Changes:
- Fixes to data codecs (data descriptors).
- Fixes for non-existing files opened READ/WRITE and other
  miscellanouse bugs found.
- Speedups for decoding and lookups, make inline-image decode better
  on some platforms and add signed-eet file support as well as opening
  eet files from memory.
2008-10-26 04:48:22 +00:00
joerg
af0fb62266 Update to eet-1.0.1 from e17. This is the first real release and no real
ChangeLog is present.
2008-06-22 01:21:31 +00:00
agc
4a3d2f7ce2 Add RMD160 digests. 2005-02-23 22:24:08 +00:00
minskim
2cae23d96e Import eet from pkgsrc-wip. Packaged by Peter Bex and modified by me.
EET is a tiny library designed to write an arbitrary set of chunks of
data to a file and optionally compress each chunk (very much like a
zip file) and allow fast random-access reading of the file later on.
It does not do zip as a zip itself has more complexity than is needed,
and it was much simpler to implement this once here.

EET is extremely fast, small and simple.  EET files can be very small
and highly compressed, making them very optimal for just sending
across the Internet without having to archive, compress or decompress
and install them.  They allow for lightning-fast random-access reads
once created, making them perfect for storing data that is written
once (or rarely) and read many times, but the program does not want to
have to read it all in at once.

It also can encode and decode data structures in memory, as well as
image data for saving to EET files or sending across the network to
other machines, or just writing to arbitrary files on the system.  All
data is encoded in a platform independent way and can be written and
read by any architecture.
2004-10-13 08:57:55 +00:00