Highlights at a glance
* Text-to-speech system with support built into Konqueror, Kate, KPDF
and the standalone application KSayIt
* Support for text to speech synthesis is integrated with the desktop
* Completely redesigned, more flexible trash system
* Kicker with improved look and feel
* KPDF now enables you to select, copy & paste text and images from
PDFs, along with many other improvements
* Kontact supports now various groupware servers, including eGroupware,
GroupWise, Kolab, OpenGroupware.org and SLOX
* Kopete supports Novell Groupwise and Lotus Sametime and gets
integrated into Kontact
* DBUS/HAL support allows to keep dynamic device icons in media:/ and
on the desktop in sync with the state of all devices
* KHTML has improved standard support and now close to full support for
CSS 2.1 and the CSS 3 Selectors module
* Better synchronization between 2 PCs
* A new high contrast style and a complete monochrome icon set
* An icon effect to paint all icons in two chosen colors, converting
third party application icons into high contrast monochrome icons
* Akregator allows you to read news from your favourite RSS-enabled
websites in one application
* Juk has now an album cover management via Google Image Search
* KMail now stores passwords securely with KWallet
* SVG files can now be used as wallpapers
* KHTML plug-ins are now configurable, so the user can selectively
disable ones that are not used. This does not include Netscape-style
plug-ins. Netscape plug-in in CPU usage can be manually lowered, and
plug-ins are more stable.
* more than 6,500 bugs have been fixed
* more than 1,700 wishes have been fullfilled
* more than 80,000 contributions with several million lines of code and
documentation added or changed
General:
* Don't use G_INLINE_FUNC in the source code, which fixes several weird
build errors.
libxfce4util:
* Fix a problem with NFS mounted home directories in Solaris (#724)
xfce4-session:
* Fix RedHat shutdown code (#703)
xfdesktop:
* fix handling of quoted commands in the desktop menu (#776)
* fix handling of .desktop files with no Categories list (#776)
* add "edit menu" button to panel plugin prefs (#554), and ability to change
the button tooltip (#764)
* fix broken panel plugin behavior when trying to track the default desktop
menu. there's a new option to either follow the default menu, or use a
static menu file (#778)
* fix bug where xfdesktop would crash if the windowlist was opened, then a
window was destroyed, and then that window was selected from the list (#672)
* fix "unique" attribute of system menu inclusion
xffm:
* ensure posix.1-1996 compatibility (#695)
* fix for crash on opening fstab on solaris (#726)
* avoid a showstopper gtk-2.4 bug (scaling gdkpixbufs from svg images).
This is bugzilla #751 report. Not all gtk showstopper bugs from svg
can be avoided. In particular with office/mobile_phone_01.svg. This
file will also crash rox
* allow relative paths for icon resolution (xfce4-modules)
* validate utf error messages (#737)
* don't quote paths that are already quoted.
* change smb-share icon to proper icon
* fix borked overwrite warning dialog message
* bug fixes for keyboardnavigation to close bug #795
* separate remove and paste button in toolbar to avoid confusing the
remove confirmation dialog with the overwrite confirmation dialog
* fix translation problems in several languages, including
brazilian-portuguese
* fill in some missing spanish translation strings
* fix for bug #524 (crashing xffm by mounting cdrom and trying to open it
in the other treeview before mount is complete)
xfcalendar:
* remembering of its position (bug #691 and #789)
* warning box for preventing users to loose their changes (#714 and #738)
* possibility to show/hide xfcalendar in taskbar, pager and systray (#719)
* possibility to choose to either show or hide the calendar window when
xfcalendar is launched (it remembered before the status when leaving)
xfce4-panel:
* Save configuration file only on exit
* Fix double click on inactive item in dialog (#739)
* 64bit fix
* Clock applet tweak (#716, hopefully)
xfprint:
* remove FILE backend and add a print-to-file entry in the printing dialog
* multiple bugfixes (#816, #817, #818, #820) in the BSD-LPR backend
Changes:
* Render implementation fixes
* Updated x86emu and resynced with upstream at Scitech
* Updated SiS driver
* Updated Nvidia driver (opensource version)
* Render acceleration for ATI's R100 and R200-series cards
* Substantial speedups in the software implementation of the render
extensions when compiled with gcc 3.4 on the i386 architecture.
* Infrastructure for rotation support in drivers
* New Trapezoid specification for the Render extension
o Respecify Render to include only 'normal' traps
o Allow backward compatibility but internally covert to new format
* Software mouse cursor is now based on the Damage extension
* A new keyboard driver is enabled by default. The old driver is
disabled unless explicitly compiled in by defining the macro
|USE_DEPRECATED_KEYBOARD_DRIVER|.
* All extensions (except Xserver-specific extensions "DMX" and
"XpExtension")can now be enabled/disabled from the configuration
file and from the command line.
* Mac OS X updates:
o Support dynamic screen configuration changes in rootless mode
o Added option to always use Mac command key equivalents
o Interpret scroll wheel mouse events correctly when shift is
held down
o Added trivial Xinput support
o Fixed launch of X clients from Finder with a space in their path
o Fixed some GLX rendering problems on Mac OS X 10.2 and earlier
* Updated xterm version
- Drop devel/boost and devel/boost-thread.
- Add devel/boost-docs which includes all the documentation related to Boost
(previously included in devel/boost).
- Add devel/boost-build which includes bjam, the Boost.Build framework.
- Add devel/boost-headers which includes all the header files needed at build
time by programs using Boost (previously included in devel/boost).
- Add devel/boost-libs which includes all the binary libraries needed at build
and run time by programs using Boost (previously included in devel/boost and
devel/thread). All of them are multithreaded, to make things easier.
- devel/boost-python includes the Boost Python library (as it did before), but
now works, given that everything is threaded again.
- Drop our thread_user.hpp customization. Avoids some build failures that
appeared when the previous boost-thread package was not installed.
- Use static PLISTs.
- Install unversioned files. Makes things *a lot* easier when building stuff
outside pkgsrc.
- Add meta-pkgs/boost, a meta package that depends on all of the above.
Thanks go to jlam@ and tv@ for their comments.
While here, update to 1.32.0:
New Toolset Names
The names of some the Boost.Build toolsets have been changed to remove the "."
(dot) character and to fix some other naming inconsistencies. For example,
vc7.1 toolset was renamed to become vc-7_1. Please refer to the Supported
Toolsets section of the installation guide for the complete list of the current
toolset names. This change was made as a part of the effort to make the Boost
distribution compatible with ISO 9660 level 2 requirements.
New Libraries
* Assignment Library: Filling containers with constant or generated data
has never been easier, from Thorsten Ottosen.
* Minmax Library: Standard library extensions for simultaneous min/max and
min/max element computations, from Hervé Brönnimann.
* Multi-index Containers Library: Containers with multiple STL-compatible
access interfaces, from Joaquín M López Muñoz.
* Numeric Conversion Library: Optimized policy-based numeric conversions,
from Fernando Cacciola.
* Program Options Library: Access to configuration data given on command
line, in config files and other sources, from Vladimir Prus.
* Range Library: A new infrastructure for generic algorithms that builds
on top of the new iterator concepts, from Thorsten Ottosen.
* Serialization Library: Serialization/de-serialization of arbitrary C++
data structures to various formats including text, binary, and xml, from
Robert Ramey.
* String Algorithms Library: Collection of string related algorithms for
case conversion, trimming, find/replace operations and more, from Pavol
Droba.
* Tribool: 3-state boolean type library, from Doug Gregor.
Updated Libraries
* Compose: This deprecated library has been removed.
* Graph:
o Added bundled properties to the adjacency_list and adjacency_matrix
class templates, greatly simplifying the introduction of internal
vertex and edge properties.
o The LEDA graph adaptors have been ported to LEDA 4.5.
o Added algorithms for betweenness centrality and betweenness
centrality clustering.
o Added circle layout and undirected spring layout algorithms.
* MPL Library:
o Updated to use the Boost Software License.
o New documentation, including a complete reference manual.
o Major interface changes and improvements, many of which are not
backward compatible. Please refer to the 1.32 changelog for the
detailed information about upgrading to the new version.
* Python Library:
o Updated to use the Boost Software License.
o A new, better method of wrapping classes with virtual functions
has been implemented.
o Support for the new Python Bool type, thanks to Daniel Holth.
o Support for upcoming GCC symbol export control features have been
folded in, thanks to Niall Douglas.
o Improved support for std::auto_ptr-like types.
o Components used by other libraries have been moved out of
python/detail and into boost/detail to improve dependency
relationships.
o Miscellaneous bug fixes and compiler workarounds.
* Signals Library: Introduced deterministic slot ordering, permitting
slots to be connected at the beginning or end of slot groups or the slot
list itself. Combiners may safely have state and are accessible from the
signal.
* Utility: class template result_of added.
* Test Library:
o namespace names gets shorten; old one still supported till next
release
o added proper encoding of XML PCDATA
o support for wide string comparison implemented
For complete list of changes see Test Library release notes.
Regression tests
This release has been extensively tested on a variety of different compilers
and platforms. It is known to contain no regressions against the previous
reference release on the compilers and configurations tested. Please refer to
the corresponding regression reports to see how well your compiler performs on
the new Boost codebase.
* Move the subst macros for threadlib.h from xorg-libs to
xorg/Makefile.common.
* SUBST_CLASSES should be appended.
Thanks to Manuel Stuehn <manuel.stuehn@student.uni-siegen.de> for
the email showing me the problems.
other dependencies pull in: earlier versions of docbook-xsl generate slightly
different html leading to a large number of unneccessary 'regen' commits in
htdocs. Bump minor versions for this.
This is done during the freeze so as to ensure that it gets on the branch
and we can simply tell developers to install netbsd-www version 1.2.
changes are generally bug fixes including some security fixes.
pkgsrc changes are a big PLIST cleanup and moving locale files
to ${PKGLOCALEDIR}/locale/... rather than replicating the tree.
kdepim/korganizer/plugins/holidays/holidays.cpp 1.12.2.1:
Backport of bug fixes for #84979 (crash on AMD64) [...]
Bump version to kdepim-3.3.1nb2, and update the version required by
the kde3 meta package.
Claim to be using gcc always and assume that the wrapper framework will
deal with the differences for other compilers (rather than getting imake
to try and do it).