* From tips provided by Philip Newton after a close reading of the manual page
and other docs, several typos and errors were cleared out, and a small
buglet in the error message within bmpsize() was corrected.
* Moved the code that changes a relative filename to an absolute one. This
was being called in all cases, now it is *not* called if cacheing is
disabled (via $NO_CACHE). This is for the sake of applications running in
environments where they may have trouble with full paths (due to "lockbox"
configurations).
* Made a few adjustments to the docs per suggestion, to clarify some of the
usage cases.
Changes since 2.91:
* Fixed a small bug in the PSD code, and added a test to the suite using an
image supplied by Alex Weslowski <aweslowski@rpinteractive.com>.
* Added a routine to provide Flash support, provided by Dmitry Dorofeev
<dima@yasp.com>.
* Added a patch from Dan Klein to make certain that imgsize() closes any
file descriptors it opens.
The automatic truncation in gensolpkg doesn't work for packages which
have the same package name for the first 5-6 chars.
e.g. amanda-server and amanda-client would be named amanda and amanda.
Now, we add a SVR4_PKGNAME and use amacl for amanda-client and amase for
amanda-server.
All svr4 packages also have a vendor tag, so we have to reserve some chars
for this tag, which is normaly 3 or 4 chars. Thats why we can only use 6
or 5 chars for SVR4_PKGNAME. I used 5 for all the packages, to give the
vendor tag enough room.
All p5-* packages and a few other packages have now a SVR4_PKGNAME.
ones to do, and each compiled and installed/de-installed apparently
correctly.
As a side effect of the dynamic PLIST, we no longer need to have separate
-static and -shared PLISTs. It's now easier than ever to make a perl5
package for NetBSD :)
Image::Size returns a raw (X, Y) pair of the height and width of
an image, and includes wrappers to pre-format that output into
either HTML or a set of attribute pairs suitable for the CGI.pm
library by Lincoln Stein.
Currently Image::Size can size images in XPM, XBM, GIF, JPEG, PNG,
TIFF and the PPM family of formats (PPM/PGM/PBM).