as this isn't really the real Korn shell, and "pdksh" is a more accurate
name for it. Also don't use buildlink2 so that this shell may be used to
bootstrap buildlink2.
bugs have been fixed over the 3 years since 9.0 was released, some
major portability improvements have been made, and remove pkgsrc
patch-ac
"+ work around NetBSD 1.5's use of MK symbol in curses.h (reported by
Matthias Buelow)."
directly into libfltk.{la,so} so that we don't need to guess at which
additional libraries will be needed to link into a program when linking
against libfltk. Suggested in private email by Dave Sainty <dave at
dtsp dot co dot nz>.
Changes since 1.11.1p1:
* The "log" and "rlog" commands now have a -S option to suppress the
header information when no revisions are selected.
* A serious error that allowed read-only users to tag files has been
corrected.
* The "annotate" command will no longer annotate binary files unless
you specify the new -F option.
* The "tag" and "rtag" commands will no longer move or delete branch
tags unless you use the new -B option. (This prevents accidental
changes to branch tags that are hard to undo.)
* We've standardized on the 1.5 Automake release for the moment. Again, this
should only really affect developers. See the section of the INSTALL file
about using the autotools if you are compiling CVS yourself.
Changes from 1.11.1 to 1.11.1p1:
* Read only access was broken - now fixed.
Changes from 1.11 to 1.11.1:
* The "cvs diff" command now accepts the -y/--side=by-side and -T/
--initial-tab options. (To use these options with a remote repository,
both the client and the server must support them.)
* The expansion of the loginfo format string has changed slightly.
Previously, the expansion was surrounded by single quotes ('); if a file
name contained a single quote character, the string would not be parsed
as a single entity by the Unix shell (and it would not be possible to
parse it unambiguously). Now the expansion is surrounded by double
quotes (") and any embedded dollar signs ($), backticks (`), backslashes
(\), and double quotes are preceded by a backslash. This is parsed as a
single entity by the shell reguardless of content. This change should
not be noticable unless you're not using a Unix shell or you have
embedded the format string inside a double quoted string.
* There was a bug in the diff code which sometimes caused conflicts to
be flagged which shouldn't have been. This has been fixed.
* New "cvs rlog" and "cvs rannotate" commands have been added to get log
messages and annotations without having to have a checked-out copy.
* Exclusive revision ranges have been added to "cvs log" using ::
(similar to "cvs admin -o").
* The VMS client now accepts wildcards if you're running VMS 7.x.
* ZLIB has been updated to version 1.1.3, the most current version. This
includes mostly some optimizations and minor bug fixes.
* The ~/.cvspass file has a slightly modified format. CVSROOTs are now
stored in a new canonical form - hostnames are now case insensitive and
port numbers are always stored in the new format. Until a new login for
a particular CVSROOT is performed with the new version of CVS, new and
old versions of CVS should interoperate invisibly. After that point, an
extra login using the old version of CVS may be necessary to continue to
allow the new and old versions of CVS to interoperate using the same
~/.cvspass file and CVSROOT. The exception to this rule occurs when the
CVSROOTs used with the different versions use case insensitively
different hostnames, for example, "empress", and "empress.2-wit.com".
* A password and a port number may now be specified in CVSROOT for
pserver connections. The new format is:
:pserver:[[user][:password]@]host[:[port]]/path
Note that passwords specified in a checkout command will be saved in the
clear in the CVS/Root file in each created directory, so this is not
recommended, except perhaps when accessing anonymous repositories or the
like.
* The distribution has been converted to use Automake. This shouldn't
affect most users except to ease some portability concerns, but if you
are building from the repository and encounter problems with the
makefiles, you might try running ./noautomake.sh after a fresh update
-AC.
Changes since version 0.104:
0.107
* Fixed: Tests did not work on MS-Windows.
* Fixed: Executing shell commands did not work on MS-Windows.
* Fixed: Reading a dependency file did not work on MS-Windows.
0.106
* Fixed: When uploading with scp fails because of a read-only file
system this was not noted as an error.
* Fixed: When uploading multiple files with scp and one or more failed, the
signatures were updated anyway.
0.105
* Improved performance by not computing the buildcheck signature for virtual
targets. Especially helps for the recipe that ":mkdownload" generates.
When evaluating a Python expression, replace ">" with "$gt", "<"
with "$lt" and "|" with $bar, so that ":print" isn't confused.
* Fixed: did not find Python modules in the directory of the top recipe.
- First things first, suggest that those with commit access find
an open PR to address.
- Include wiz's most recent list of "packages looking for updaters".
If you've since committed an update, or have noticed other
packages in need of updating, please do your part to keep the
list current and accurate.
- Improve formatting.
- Correct spelling.
- Standardize punctuation.
Default unrecognised keys to 'pause-toggle' rather than 'play'.
Make 'rew' a synonym for 'prev' and add 'recall' for 'add previous
track to queue' functionality.
* Using a stable distfile instead of the daily snapshot.
* add $r->add_config method to add dynamic configuration at request time
* add Apache::DIR_MAGIC_TYPE constant
* add support for directive handlers
* add Apache::Server->add_config method to add dynamic configuration at
server startup time
* add Apache::Directive->to_string method
* add support for pluggable <Perl> sections
* fix the filehandle leak in APR::PerlIO
* fix compilation if apache/apr do not have thread support
Prompted by Simon Hitzemann in PR 19061
Changes from 0.6.6.6 to 0.6.7:
0.6.7 20020702
+ Updated the passive OS fingerprint database (853 records)
!! Fixed the strlcpy bug in the the telnet dissector (oops alor mistake)
!! Fixed a possible sigfault in the rlogin dissector
!! Fixed the exit_func for Mac OS X
[Also take the category name out of the previous two entries]
shells/mudsh.
Is there any reason why a shell (or command line) cannot be as
tolerant or as intelligent as a text adventure game like Zork, or a
MUD (Multi User Dungeon)? Is there any reason why a shell cannot work
like such a game? ("Go North", etc.)
Actually, the answer is no and this is a perl implementation to prove it.
Have fun, and don't get eaten by a Grue!
as archivers/libcomprex.
The libcomprex library transparently handles automatic compression and
decompression of files. The API is similar to C's built-in file access
functions, which provides a smooth transition to libcomprex.
libcomprex can also open uncompressed files, making it a good
replacement for the native file access functions.
libcomprex is part of the GNUpdate project.
libcomprex is currently in development (so should not be used in
stable products).
archivers/makeself.
makeself is a (very small) shell script that makes neat
self-extracting shell scripts, and allows you to specify a "setup"
command to execute upon finishing. This is in a similar concept to
Windows winzip self-extracting archives.
Noticed in the FreeBSD ports collection.
archivers/9e.
9e is a program to explore Plan9 archives. You can do whatever you
like with the source so long as you clearly indicate all modifications
and the author responsible for each.
Converted from the FreeBSD ports collection.
as devel/aap.
A-A-P is a replacement for make. It makes it easy to locate, download,
build and install software. It also supports browsing source code,
developing programs, managing different versions and distribution of
software and documentation.
A-A-P is currently under development and as such not everything works yet.
Use with care.
A-A-P is maintained by Bram Moolenaar.
* New feature. TEMPLATE_DIR_MATCH_SENDER provides a way to further
specialize the template selection process. When enabled, TMDA looks
for templates in a subdirectory of TEMPLATE_DIR that matches the
sender address, and then increasingly general portions of the domain
part of the address. For more information and an example, see
<URL:http://tmda.net/config-vars.html#TEMPLATE_DIR_MATCH_SENDER>
* tmda-pending now allows messages to be specified on standard input
instead of the command line by using `-' instead of a message
list. See ``tmda-pending -h'' for an example. Thanks to Michael
S. Fischer for the patch.
Only accept Python 2.2, as the PLIST is incorrect for 2.1 (due to one
file failing to compile).
I2CB icbd -- the Improved ICB Server
------------------------------------
ICBD is an online chat system which allows a large number of users
to participate in realtime online discussions. Among the features
of the ICB chat system are:
* Simple, fast protocol and efficient polling-based implementation
minimize `lag' effects
* Persistent user database allows authentication of nicknames,
storage of various user information, and leaving messages for
users who are not logged on at the moment.
* Any user may create groups, and exercise control over those
groups, allowing for a wide range of discussion styles. This
control includes making groups public or private, visible or
invisible, and moderated or unmoderated
* The fabulous, famous '/brick' command lends true interactivity
to the chat experience :-)
ICB (International CB) is a teleconferencing system that allows Internet users
to participate in realtime online discussions. This package builds a client
program (called, strangely enough, "icb") that is used to access ICB.
i2cb was enhanced to support IPv6 etc.
Updated SDL to 1.2.5nb1 -- so that devel/avifile-devel will compile
again.
Fixed ettercap-0.6.6.6 -- for really current systems it will now
build, whereas it did not before (so I didn't bump the PKGREVISION
since no one could have installed it).
Updated gaim to 0.59.3nb1 -- fix the lossage with control-k and
reassigned control-c to the job of popping up the color picker.
20021104/PB:
update IPv6 address allocation for 2001::/16
update IPv4 databases
remove user/group on "make install" to enable non-root RPM build
update text on ipv6calcweb.cgi
minor reviews
tag version 0.44
20020830/PB:
add support of dashes on MAC/EUI-48 addresses
showinfo prints now type of EUI-48 addresses
20020817/PB:
fix configure.in, learnt now how to proper use AC_CHECK_LIB and AC_CHECK_HEADERS
credits to Arkadiusz Miskiewicz!
20020730/PB:
fix not proper autodetection code for MAC addresses
tag version 0.43
20020717/PB:
update URL to OUI database, cosmetic OUI fixes, update databases
tag version 0.42
20020511/PB:
bugfix not showing OUI on showinfo "-i"
update CIDR and OUI data
Thanks to Johnny Lam for checking the package before I commited it.
This package is made with the 'xsim' AWT device and the OSwald scheduler.
A pthreads (o4p) based scheduler is being worked on.
What is Wonka?
Wonka is ACUNIA's cleanroom Virtual Machine for the JavaTM language. It
is extremely portable and self-contained, and can optionally be used with
its own real-time executive (OSwaldTM) to provide a complete solution for
embedded devices. It is a full implementation of the Java language, not
just a subset. And it's Open Source.
An Embedded VM
We didn't build a Virtual Machine first, and then look for a market; we
had a project, we had some hardware, and the project required that
hardware to run Java. The result is a Java implementation designed from
the start for embedded systems.
A VM for Real-Time
That system has real-time requirements; maybe not Hard Real-Time, but
hard enough for most of us. We don't claim to have made a totally pred-
ictable Java (it may not even be possible), but we have worked hard to
bring Java's inherent unpredictability under control.
A Java2-compatible VM
Some embedded VMs sacrifice full Java compatibility for other aims. Wonka
doesn't. Automatic garbage collection, dynamic class loading, user-
defined class loaders, fine-grained access control, they're all there.
The standard distribution doesn't include JavaBeansTM or Swing, but you
could add them if you wanted to: all the infrastructure needed is present.
Full AWT 1.1.8 Support
Wonka comes with a high-performance lightweight AWT (RudolphTM) suitable
for any memory-mapped or framebuffer display. Or you can plug in your own
implementation, or run with no AWT at all (e.g. in a ``headless'' system).
The choice is yours.
Free and Open Source
The Wonka Public License was conceived with the needs of embedded system
developers in mind. You don't have to make your entire business open-
source in order to use Wonka, nor do we insist you join a ``community
process''. The WPL is based on the well-known BSD license (revised
version), which is accepted by the community as being a genuine Open
Source license and as a free software license, compatible with the GPL.
Jikes version 1.16 represents 9 months of development, 4 megs of patches
(when consolidated into one unified diff) covering well over 100,000 lines
of changes. Some of the focus of the releaes include:
* spec support:
- support for JSR 41 (java asserts available in JSDK 1.4!)
- tighter JLS/JVMS obedience, including focus on:
. Inner classes
. Definite (un)assignment
* adjusted options:
- more gnu-like options available such as --help.
- --source and --target options to control how jikes
interprets source and emits classes.
- more javac compatibility flags added, such as -J
* 9 months of miscenalious bug fixes:
- over 350 jacks test cases fixed
- ZERO jacks test cases regressed
This release is dedicated to geeks and the people who love them.
Jikes version 1.17 contains a number of bug fixes from Jikes 1.16
Although the computer screen is two-dimensional, today most users of
windowing environments control their systems with a one-dimensional
list of choices -- the standard pull-down or drop-down menus such as
those found on Microsoft Windows, Presentation Manager, or the
Macintosh.
An alternative user-interface technique is "pie" menus -
two-dimensional, circular, and in many ways easier to use and faster
than conventional linear menus. Pie menus also work well with
alternative pointing devices such as those found in stylus or
pen-based systems.
piewm is a virtual window manager based on tvtwm, which uses pie menus.
Navi2ch is a viewer program dedicated to chatting in 2ch.net - the biggest,
most famous, influencial BBS in Japan.
Although this software is really well-written, It's worth noting that most
opinions/informations found in 2ch.net are next to senseless. Thus, Good
NetBSD users are really encouraged not to devote themselves to 2ch! :-)
collection.
A RenderMan compliant renderer. Based on the REYES architecture,
Aqsis is designed for speed and memory efficiency. Complete
implementation of programmable shading.
libargparse is a command line argument parser library in C++
The ArgParse class allows you to specify names of options that you
want parsed, along with a usage message for them. Options come in
four flavors: flag, int, float, and string. Flags don't take
arguments, but the other kinds do. For an option that takes an
argument, it can be specified with an equals sign, with a colon, or by
putting it in the next element of argv. ("--foo=stuff",
"--foo:stuff", or "--foo stuff", respectively)
The flavors that take arguments also come in array flavors. With an
array, you specify a pointer to a vector of the basic type, instead of
just a pointer to a basic type. This allows the option to appear more
than once, and the new values are appended to the array. Optionally,
you can also specify a separator character, so that multiple array
elements can be parsed up from a single instance of the option.
Options can start with either a single dash or a double dash, but see
allowOneCharOptionsToBeCombined() for more information.
interpreter, into the NetBSD Packages Collection.
TinyScheme is a lightweight Scheme interpreter that implements as
large a subset of R5RS as was possible without getting very large and
complicated. It is meant to be used as an embedded scripting
interpreter for other programs. As such, it does not offer IDEs or
extensive toolkits although it does sport a small top-level loop,
included conditionally. A lot of functionality in TinyScheme is
included conditionally, to allow developers freedom in balancing
features and footprint.
As an embedded interpreter, it allows multiple interpreter states to
coexist in the same program, without any interference between them.
Programmatically, foreign functions in C can be added and values can
be defined in the Scheme environment. Being quite a small program, it
is easy to comprehend, get to grips with, and use.
PLIST sorting.
Qt 3.0.6 is a bugfix release. It maintains both forward and backward
compatibility (source and binary) with Qt 3.0.5
Binary compatibility warning: Qt 3.0.6 is backward and forward binary compatible
with Qt 3.0.5, and is planned to be binary compatible with Qt 3.1. Unfortunately
Qt 3.0.5 is not 100% backward binary compatible with Qt 3.0.3 (a class got a few
bytes smaller), meaning executables compiled with 3.0.5 may not run properly
when linked dynamically to 3.0.3. at runtime. Note that this is not a problem on
MS-Windows. Due to its wide distributed in various GNU/Linux distributions, we
have decided to stick with 3.0.5's ABI. If you ship dynamically linked
executables, we suggest putting a QT_REQUIRE_VERSION macro at the beginning of
your main function:
...
#include <qmessagebox.h>
...
int main( int argc, char**argv )
{
QT_REQUIRE_VERSION( argc, argv, "3.0.5" )
...
}
The macro will show a message box with a warning message and then abort the
application gracefully with exit(1).
For a full buglist see the Trolltech web site.
Changes since version 1.0.0
Many bug fixes
Some portability fixes
New functionality:
(user_commands): new command "license"
Add ruby bindings. From Doug Kearns <djkea2@mugc.its.monash.edu.au>.
(user_command): new command 'link'
(find_command_by_keydesc): new function
(resolve_command_from_keydesc): likewise
(cmd_link): likewise
(update_last_access): new function
(find_last_frame): likewise
(x11_mask_to_rp_mask): new function
(rp_mask_to_x11_mask): likewise
(user_command): new command "focuslast"
(find_frame_up): new function
(find_frame_down): likewise
(find_frame_left): likewise
(find_frame_right): likewise
(user_commands): new commands "focusup" "focusdown" "focusright"
"focusleft" "startup_message" "restart".
(show_last_message): new function
(user_commands): new "unsetenv" command
(user_commands): new commands deffgcolor, defbgcolor.
(update_gc): new function
(init_defaults): new function
(init_screen): initialize the screen's fg_color to black and
bg_color to white.
(user_commands): New commands defbarloc, defbartimeout, defborder,
deffont, defintputwidth, defmaxsizepos, defpadding, deftranspos,
defwaitcursor, defwinfmt, defwinname, defwinpos.
Changes with mod_ssl 2.8.12 (04-Oct-2002 to 23-Oct-2002)
*) Fixed potential Cross-Site-Scripting bug.
*) Allow also 8192 bytes of shared memory data size.
Hot-babe is a small graphical utility which display the system
activity in a very special way. When the CPU is idle, it displays
a dressed girl, and when the activity goes up, as the temperature
increases, the girl begins to undress, to finish totally naked when
the system activity reaches 100%. Of course, if you can be shocked
by nudity, don't use it!
on net/net-snmp-current and on the FreeBSD net-snmp port, and may be
considered as an update to ucd-snmp. Changes since ucd-snmp include:
* complete rewrite of the agent internals
* new agent module API
* SNMPv3
* improved AgentX subagent handling
* many, many bugfixes in plugged memory leaks
* prevent DoS attacks from authenticated users
Provided in PR 18042 by Julio Merino.
Buildtool is a set of helper tools designed to make easy to
configure source packages and build them, also making them more
portable.
Buildtool can be tought as the BSD replacement of GNU automake,
autoconf and libtool.
Fix sasl-config script so that "sasl-config --libs" returns the full list
of libraries and linker flags needed to link against libsasl. Bump
PKGREVISION.
CUPS 1.1.16 adds support for a new CUPS printer driver for Windows
NT/2000/XP that provides accurate page accounting as well as support
for the banner, job billing, job priority, and page label options. The
new release also contains many small bug fixes and enhancements,
including better USB printing support, support for printer names
containing any printable character (123print, my-long-printer-name,
etc.), and French language localization of the web interface and
documentation.
Splitting out a common Makefile for future unixodbc-postgresql and
iodbc-postgresql packages.
Changes from version 7.1.3 include:
Remove query size limit (Hiroshi)
Remove text field size limit (Hiroshi)
Fix for SQLPrimaryKeys in multibyte mode (Hiroshi)
Allow ODBC procedure calls (Hiroshi)
Improve boolean handing (Aidan Mountford)
Most configuration options on setable via DSN (Hiroshi)
Multibyte, performance fixes (Hiroshi)
Allow driver to be used with iODBC or unixODBC (Peter E)
MD5 password encryption support (Bruce)
Add more compatibility functions to odbc.sql (Peter E)
This has a variety of fixes from 7.2.2, including fixes to prevent
possible data loss.
A dump/restore is *not* required for those running 7.2.X.
Changes from version 7.2.2 include:
Prevent possible compressed transaction log loss (Tom)
Prevent non-superuser from increasing most recent vacuum info (Tom)
Handle pre-1970 date values in newer versions of glibc (Tom)
Fix possible hang during server shutdown
Prevent spinlock hangs on SMP PPC machines (Tomoyuki Niijima)
Fix pg_dump to properly dump FULL JOIN USING (Tom)
CMU dhcpd 3.3.7 is a combined BootP and DHCP server, available from
Carnegie Mellon University.
Development of this sofware at CMU has been halted. At Princeton
we've added a few new features, and fixed some bugs (and probably
introduced new ones, naturally). We've also incorporated patches
that others have posted. Our version is 3.3.7+PU.
Some applications, notably the numbering of points in outlines,
use a scheme that starts with the letter "a", goes to "z", and then
starts over with "aa" thru "az", then "ba", and so on. This module
provides functions that deal with that numbering system, converting
between it and integer values.
pyCA tries to make it easier for people to set up and run a organizational
certificate authority which fulfills the need for a fairly secure
certification processing. The package also tries to reduce administrative
tasks and user's frustration by providing a comfortable web interface to
users contacting the certificate authority.
2001-11-26 William M. Perry <wmperry@gnu.org>
* build-dist: Deal with new branch
* lisp/w3-e21.el: Stub for emacs 21
* lisp/docomp.el: Avoid setting up a bunch of variables that
confuse emacs21 later. This fixes the keymapp nil error during
byte compilation. Side effect is that it causes lots of warnings
in mule-sysdp.el and a few other files.
* lisp/w3-display.el (w3-pause): Emacs21 work.
Quoting from http://mail-index.netbsd.org/tech-userlevel/2002/10/16/0000.html
"I've written a tar that owes nothing to anything else. It's in the
public domain and hence is free for NetBSD to steal, anything from
lifting it verbatim to swiping ideas from.
It doesn't currently have anything like --fast-read; that hadn't
occurred to me. Now that it's been pointed out, I'll be adding it; I
think it's a valuable addition, whether or not NetBSD wants my tar."
as net/p5-DNS-ZoneParse.
This perl5 module is for parsing and manipulating DNS zone files. It can be
used to pull all the resource records into an anonymous hash structure.
Provided in PR 18577 by David.S at idiom dot com, some modifications
by me to use buildlink2 files, and to specify the correct version of
python required.
Rdiff-backup backs up one directory to another, possibly over a network.
The target directory ends up a copy of the source directory, but extra
reverse diffs are stored in a special subdirectory of that target directory,
so you can still recover files lost some time ago. The idea is to combine
the best features of a mirror and an incremental backup. Rdiff-backup also
preserves subdirectories, hard links, dev files, permissions, uid/gid
ownership (if it is running as root), and modification times. Finally,
rdiff-backup can operate in a bandwidth efficient manner over a pipe, like
rsync. Thus you can use rdiff-backup and ssh to securely back a hard drive
up to a remote location, and only the differences will be transmitted.
Provided in PR 18576 by "David S." <dgs@malign.rad.washington.edu>,
the buildlink2 glue and libtool glue added by me.
Librsync is a library for calculating and applying network deltas,
with an interface designed to ease integration into diverse network
applications. Librsync encapsulates the core algorithms of the rsync
protocol, which help with efficient calculation of the differences
between two files. The rsync algorithm is different from most
differencing algorithms because it does not require the presence of
the two files to calculate the delta. Instead, it requires a set of
checksums of each block of one file, which together form a signature
for that file. Blocks at any point in the other file which have the
same checksum are likely to be identical, and whatever remains is the
difference.
Phoenix is a redesign of the Mozilla browser component, similar to Galeon,
K-Meleon and Chimera, but written using the XUL user interface language
and designed to be cross-platform.
This is a Linux binary package for Linux and NetBSD/i386.
a numerical subject.
"And yes, this really does add a preprocessor conditional that makes
either one of two original statements get compiled, and the other
omitted (ie: the patch is correct, though just deleting a line would
work as well). The "#if 0" could become "#if 1" and the core dump
would also be gone, though the results of the sort would then
sometimes be rather hard to explain..."
Bump PKGREVISION.
Various updates and fixes that I've collected recently:
* Provide nanosleep(2) and usleep(3) wrappers.
* Make sure sigprocmask syscalls are used in pth_system.
* "Fix" FD_SET handling in the select(2) wrapper so that
mismatches between pth FD_SETSIZE and user program
FD_SETSIZE don't cause problems.
* Update poll(2) wrapper to be more poll(2) like - in
particular never return EINVAL for bad file descriptors
Thanks to Matthias Drochner for this.
* Improve error handling in connect(2) wrapper so that we
don't confuse the scheduler. This fixes pkg/17944 from
Christian Biere (ChristianBiere at gmx dot de)
* Introduce autoconf handling of the value of FD_SETSIZE
used by pth. If we have to hard code a value we might
as well make it easy to change and make the inclusion
of pth.h or pthread.h by a program that re-defines
FD_SETSIZE an error.
Inspired by pkg/17944.
* Fix a compiler warning that I introduced a little while
ago.
* Disable --enable-syscall-hard for non-NetBSD platforms
and for pre-1.6/m68k. Make a note of the PRs that need
fixing. This closes pkg/18236 from Klaus Heinz (k dot
heinz dot sep dot zwei at onlinehome dot de)
The FD_SETSIZE problems would be handled better if pth was changed
to use poll(2), and not select(2), internally.
arts
* Compile fix for IRIX64
kdelibs
* KHTML : Fixed progress bar.
* KHTML : Fixed several crashes and misrenderings.
* KHTML : Fixed "HTML source displayed in text viewer" after viewing
text.
* KHTML : Only ask "download plugins?" once per requested mimetype in
the same page.
* Javascript : several fixes (row.cells(), tablecaption.*, heading.*,
event.x/y) .
* libkscreensaver : Fixed bug that in rare cases prevented the
screensaver from showing anything.
* kio_file : Proper "disk full" error message in mkdir
* KIO : Dropping links to webpages onto the desktop works in all cases
now
* Drag-and-drop of URLs : Improved compatibility with non-KDE apps
* KToolBar : fix for oversized comboboxes in toolbars, e.g. in KOffice
kdebase
* NSPlugins : Compatibility with gcc-3.x
* Konqueror configuration : fixed default font size value
* KDesktop : better determination of icon heights, for "lineup Icons"
* KDesktop : Don't rearrange all icons when changing the font size
* KControl : Fixed proxy configuration dialog layout
* Fix a lot of mem leak
* Kaddressbook : fix crash when we export CSV list
* KDM
* Security: proper temp dir creation for QT and disabled
crash dialog
* Made chooser work at all
* Fixed compilation with older glibc
* Fixed bad lilo interaction wrt. warnings
kdegraphics
* Kamera: Fixed crash when we didn't select camera in kcmkamera
* KGhostview: Security related fixes
kdemultimedia
* KMix : Fixed compilation on Solaris
* Kaboodle : fixed when it was embedded in konqueror
* Fix a lot of memory leak
kdenetwork
* kpf: Security related fixes
kdepim
* KAlarm: Fix right-to-left character sets not being displayed in
message edit control
* KAlarm: Make "Help -> Report Bug" use the KDE bug system (bug
#43250)
* KNotes: Fixed session management (bug #22844)
* KNotes: Fixed mouse behaviour to be like kwin's (raise and lower
already on mouse press)
* KNotes: Fixed (in)famous bug that caused the big black windows
and lost data (bugs #22062, #44870, #45084, #45386, #45451,
#46570, #47352)
* KNotes: Fixed drag'n drop of links and plain text
kdesdk
* Disabled kbugbuster compilation because bug system changed. Use CVS
version if you need it.