Problems found with existing digests:
Package suse131_libSDL
1c4d17a53bece6243cb3e6dd11c36d50f851a4f4 [recorded]
da39a3ee5e6b4b0d3255bfef95601890afd80709 [calculated]
Package suse131_libdbus
de99fcfa8e2c7ced28caf38c24d217d6037aaa56 [recorded]
da39a3ee5e6b4b0d3255bfef95601890afd80709 [calculated]
Package suse131_qt4
94daff738912c96ed8878ce1a131cd49fb379206 [recorded]
886206018431aee9f8a01e1fb7e46973e8dca9d9 [calculated]
Problems found locating distfiles for atari800, compat12, compat 13,
compat14, compat15, compat20, compat30, compat40, compat50,
compat50-x11, compat51, compat51-x11, compat60, compat61,
compat61-x11, fmsx, osf1_lib, vice, xbeeb, xm7.
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.
to address issues with NetBSD-6(and earlier)'s fontconfig not being
new enough for pango.
While doing that, also bump freetype2 dependency to current pkgsrc
version.
Suggested by tron in PR 47882
NEStopia is a portable Nintendo Entertainment System emulator
written in C++ by Martin Freij and ported to Linux by R. Belmont.
NEStopia strives for the most accurate emulation possible at the
pixel-by-pixel and sample-by-sample level, and it has excellent
mapper and UNIF board support as well. A few features:
- Supports .nes and .unf/.unif format ROMs
- Supports .fds discs
- Supports .nsf music rips
- All supported files can be extracted from zip or 7zip containers (an
archive browser is not yet included - this assumes the common
GoodSet case of one zip or 7zip per game)
- Supports save states
- Supports movie recordings
- Supports the "rewinder" - if you make a bad jump and screw up your game,
press Backspace and the game will run in reverse. Press \ to take over
again and try to fix your mistake.
- Friendly GUI configuration
- Autodetection of PAL and NTSC format games
- Supports drag and drop of compatible games and music rips from modern
Linux file managers, including KDE's Konqueror and GNOME's Nautilus.