This package was submited as part of PR pkg/43929 which adds the Koha Integrated Library System
submitted by Edgar Fuß
-------------------------------------
This is an objected-oriented Perl interface to GraphicsMagick, a fork of
ImageMagick. It provides an interface similar to that PerlMagick provides
to ImageMagick, but wit a different class name.
Use the module to read, manipulate, or write an image or image sequence from
within a Perl script. This makes it suitable for Web CGI scripts.
This package was submited as part of PR pkg/43929 which adds the Koha Integrated Library System
submitted by Edgar Fuß
-------------------------------------
GD::Barcode is a subclass of GD and allows you to create barcode image with GD.
This module based on "Generate Barcode Ver 1.02 By Shisei Hanai 97/08/22".
From 1.14, you can use this module even if no GD (except plot method).
This package was submited as part of PR pkg/43929 which adds the Koha Integrated Library System
submitted by Edgar Fuß
-------------------------------------
Barcode::Code128 generates bar codes using the CODE 128 symbology. It can
generate images in PNG or GIF format using the GD package, or it can generate a
text string representing the barcode that you can render using some other
technology if desired.
The intended use of this module is to create a web page with a bar code on it,
which can then be printed out and faxed or mailed to someone who will scan the
bar code. The application which spurred its creation was an expense report tool,
where the employee submitting the report would print out the web page and staple
the receipts to it, and the Accounts Payable clerk would scan the bar code to
indicate that the receipts were received.
The default settings for this module produce a large image that can safely be
FAXed several times and still scanned easily. If this requirement is not
important you can generate smaller image using optional parameters.
If you wish to generate images with this module you must also have the GD.pm
module (written by Lincoln Stein, and available from CPAN) installed.
If the GD module is not present, you can still use the module, but you will not
be able to use its functions for generating images. You can use the barcode()
method to get a string of "#" and " " (hash and space) characters, and use your
own image-generating routine with that as input.
This package was submited as part of PR pkg/43929 which adds the Koha Integrated Library System
submitted by Edgar Fuß
-------------------------------------
This module provides a tied hash interface and some convenience
functions for using a memcached cache to memoize functions.
This package was submited as part of PR pkg/43929 which adds the Koha Integrated Library System
submitted by Edgar Fuß
-------------------------------------
The Perl 5 module Locale::PO provides methods for manipulating objects that represent
entries in a gettext po-file (untranslated and translated strings, with associated
comments). It can load and save complete po-files.
This package was submited as part of PR pkg/43929 which adds the Koha Integrated Library System
submitted by Edgar Fuß
-------------------------------------
ExtUtils::Embed provides utility functions for embedding a Perl interpreter and
extensions in your C/C++ applications. Typically, an application Makefile will
invoke ExtUtils::Embed functions while building your application.
This package was submited as part of PR pkg/43929 which adds the Koha Integrated Library System
submitted by Edgar Fuß
-------------------------------------
This module provides several procedures to compute or validate check
digits.
This package was submited as part of PR pkg/43929 which adds the Koha Integrated Library System
submitted by Edgar Fuß
-------------------------------------
The MARC-XML distribution is an extension to the MARC-Record distribution for
working with MARC21 data that is encoded as XML. The XML encoding used is the
MARC21slim schema supplied by the Library of Congress. More information may be
obtained here: http://www.loc.gov/standards/marcxml/
This version of MARC-XML supersedes an the versions ending with 0.25 which were
used with the MARC.pm framework. MARC-XML now uses MARC::Record exclusively.
This package was submited as part of PR pkg/43929 which adds the Koha Integrated Library System
submitted by Edgar Fuß
-------------------------------------
DublinCore::Record is an abstract class for manipulating DublinCore metadata.
The Dublin Core is a small set of metadata elements for describing information
resources. For more information on embedding DublinCore in HTML see RFC 2731
http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2731 or http://www.dublincore.org/documents/dces/
This package was submited as part of PR pkg/43929 which adds the Koha Integrated Library System
submitted by Edgar Fuß
-------------------------------------
This module provides an implentation of the LOC's spec on how to convert
metadata between MARC and Dublin Core format. The spec for converting MARC to
Dublin Core is available at: http://www.loc.gov/marc/marc2dc.html, and from DC
to MARC: http://www.loc.gov/marc/dccross.html.
NB: The conversion cannot be done in a round-trip manner. i.e. Doing a
conversion from MARC to DC, then trying to go back to MARC will not yield the
original record.
This package was submited as part of PR pkg/43929 which adds the Koha Integrated Library System
submitted by Edgar Fuß
-------------------------------------
MARC::Charset allows you to turn MARC-8 encoded strings into UTF-8 strings.
MARC-8 is a single byte character encoding that predates unicode, and allows
you to put non-Roman scripts in MARC bibliographic records.
This package was submited as part of PR pkg/43929 which adds the Koha Integrated Library System
submitted by Edgar Fuß
-------------------------------------
SMS::Send is intended to provide a driver-based single API for sending SMS and
MMS messages. The intent is to provide a single API against which to write the
code to send an SMS message.
At the same time, the intent is to remove the limits of some of the previous
attempts at this sort of API, like "must be free internet-based SMS services".
SMS::Send drivers are installed seperately, and might use the web, email or
physical SMS hardware. It could be a free or paid. The details shouldn't matter.
You should not have to care how it is actually sent, only that it has been sent
(although some drivers may not be able to provide certainty).
* Use own parser for bytea output, not requiring anymore the libpq 9.0 to parse
the hex format.
* Don't fail connection if the client encoding is a non-normalized variant.
* Correctly detect an empty query sent to the backend.
* Fixed a SystemError clobbering libpq errors raised without SQLSTATE.
* Fixed interaction between NamedTuple and server-side cursors.
* Allow to specify --static-libpq on setup.py command line instead of just in
'setup.cfg'.
This is a package manager for pkgsrc.
Available commands:
nih help - Display help message
nih refresh - Download pkg_summary and SHA512 files
nih install - Install or update packages
nih uninstall - Uninstall packages
nih verify - Verify packages integrity
nih status - Show status of installed packages
nih info - Show information about packages
nih meta - Output available or installed meta packages
nih search - Powerful search in packages
nih leaf - Output or remove autoinstalled leaf packages
nih list - List packages
nih mark - Mark packages
nih deps - Show dependencies
nih clean-cache - Clean-up cache directory with binaries
* Fixed the way to calculate balance variation for the linear regression
forecast method (backported from KDE4)
* Fixed a crash when a budget selected for a report is no longer present
* Don't allow import of investment transactions that don't have a share
amount. This used to end in a div by zero when calculating the price.
* Add all overdue schedules when calculating forecast
* Backported fix from Ian Neal to solve problems when opening the ledger
with specific scheduled transactions
* Fixed loop in payments of the home page when a schedule is set to
end by date
* Improved anonymizer
* Fixed transaction loader for XML file
* Don't preset date in currency calculator to today in all cases
Every separate field (PKGPATH, PKGNAME, COMMENT etc.) may be queried
separately and multiple fields may be queried too. A lot of search
strategies are available. Set of fields and search strategies may
very depending on your server configuration. Search in multiple
"repositories" is supported too, e.g. search in binary repository
or in pkgsrc source tree.
Communication protocol is a well known dictionary protocol described
in RFC-2229. Server may run dictd or any other dictionary protocol
server. For dictd see http://www.dict.org and
http://sourceforge.net/projects/dict
pkg_online has minimal amount of things specific to pkgsrc and can
easily be adapted to any other packageing systems.
Of course it is based on pkg_summary-utils ;-)
bup is a program that backs things up. bup has a few advantages
over other backup software:
It uses a rolling checksum algorithm (similar to rsync) to split
large files into chunks. The most useful result of this is you can
backup huge virtual machine (VM) disk images, databases, and XML
files incrementally, even though they're typically all in one huge
file, and not use tons of disk space for multiple versions.
It uses the packfile format from git (the open source version
control system), so you can access the stored data even if you
don't like bup's user interface.
Unlike git, it writes packfiles directly (instead of having a
separate garbage collection / repacking stage) so it's fast even
with gratuitously huge amounts of data. bup's improved index formats
also allow you to track far more filenames than git (millions) and
keep track of far more objects (hundreds or thousands of gigabytes).
Data is "automagically" shared between incremental backups without
having to know which backup is based on which other one - even if
the backups are made from two different computers that don't even
know about each other. You just tell bup to back stuff up, and it
saves only the minimum amount of data needed.
You can back up directly to a remote bup server, without needing
tons of temporary disk space on the computer being backed up. And
if your backup is interrupted halfway through, the next run will
pick up where you left off. And it's easy to set up a bup server:
just install bup on any machine where you have ssh access.
Bup can use "par2" redundancy to recover corrupted backups even if
your disk has undetected bad sectors.
Even when a backup is incremental, you don't have to worry about
restoring the full backup, then each of the incrementals in turn;
an incremental backup acts as if it's a full backup, it just takes
less disk space.
You can mount your bup repository as a FUSE filesystem and access
the content that way, and even export it over Samba.
* pkgsrc change: Avoid depends on gd extension in package.xml since it
is covered by pkgsrc's denedency.
0.3.3 2010-10-25 14:36 UTC
Changelog:
Automatically built QA release
Bug #16808 imagefilledpolygon(): You must have at least 3 points in your
array - ghhoriuchi
Bug #16927 PDF class implementation incomplete? - daveo
Bug #17191 Deprecated: Assigning the return value of new by reference - neufeind