Commit graph

11 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
wiz
7f84153239 Add python-3.6 to incompatible versions. 2017-01-01 14:43:22 +00:00
wiz
ad0031c15e Remove python33: adapt all packages that refer to it. 2016-07-09 13:03:30 +00:00
wiz
57199de455 Switch to MASTER_SITES_PYPI. 2016-06-08 17:43:20 +00:00
adam
7f3b4730ad Extend PYTHON_VERSIONS_INCOMPATIBLE to 35 2015-12-05 21:25:27 +00:00
wiz
c1b44346cd Mark packages that are not ready for python-3.3 also not ready for 3.4,
until proven otherwise.
2014-05-09 07:36:53 +00:00
wiz
276a1f3ae8 Update to 1.1.5, changes not found. 2014-01-19 22:22:56 +00:00
asau
46402b95a7 Drop superfluous PKG_DESTDIR_SUPPORT, "user-destdir" is default these days. 2012-10-03 00:20:09 +00:00
gls
e387de1586 Update converters/zbase32 to 1.1.3.
pkgsrc changes:
- /usr/bin/env python is no longer valid as an interpreter.

upstream changes:

Unknown.
2012-02-12 20:02:53 +00:00
gdt
b2713344ba Add patch to avoid trying to fetch setuptools-darcs. 2010-11-27 14:15:29 +00:00
dholland
d578a77acc fix typo in maintainer 2010-08-01 05:44:07 +00:00
gdt
b130c9e4e4 Import py26-zbase32-1.1.2 as converters/py-zbase32.
An alternate base32 encoder (not RFC 3548 compliant).

The rationale for base-32 encoding in RFC 3548 [1] is as written therein: "The
Base 32 encoding is designed to represent arbitrary sequences of octets in a
form that needs to be case insensitive but need not be humanly readable.".

The rationale for our encoding is different -- it is to represent arbitrary
sequences of octets in a form that is as convenient as possible for human
users to manipulate.  In particular, z-base-32 was created in order to serve
the Mnet project [3], where 30-octet cryptographic values are encoded into
URIs for humans to manipulate.  Anticipated uses of these URIs include cut-
and-paste, text editing (e.g. in HTML files), manual transcription via a
keyboard, manual transcription via pen-and-paper, vocal transcription over
phone or radio, etc.

The desiderata for such an encoding are:

 * minimizing transcription errors -- e.g. the well-known problem of confusing
   `0' with `O'
 * embedding into other structures -- e.g. search engines, structured or
   marked-up text, file systems, command shells
 * brevity -- Shorter URLs are better than longer ones.
 * ergonomics -- Human users (especially non-technical ones) should find the
   URIs as easy and pleasant as possible.  The uglier the URI looks, the worse.
2010-07-24 17:56:26 +00:00