The release notes can be found at
http://www.gnome.org/start/2.10/notes/rnwhatsnew.html, and will give you a
good idea of what has gone into this release overall. However, a lot of
FreeBSD specific additions and fixes have been made. For example, this
release offers fixed ACPI support as well as new CPU freqeuncy monitoring
support. See the FreeBSD GNOME 2.10 upgrade page at
http://www.FreeBSD.org/gnome/docs/faq210.html for the entire list as well
as a list of known issues and upgrade instructions.
GNOME 2.10, as well as all of our releases, would not be possible without
the great team that goes into porting and testign each and every component.
Thanks definitely goes out to ahze, adamw, bland, kwm, mezz, and pav for all
their work. We would also like to thank our adventurous users that chose to
ride the walrus. We'd especially like to thank the following users that
provided patches for GNOME 2.10:
ade
Yasuda Keisuke
Franz Klammer
Khairil Yusof
Radek Kozlowsk
And anyone else I may have accidentally omitted.
As with GNOME 2.8, 2.10 comes with a brand-spankin' new splashscreen
courtesy of Franz Klammer. However, unlike GNOME 2.8, we've included all
of the FreeBSD GNOME splashscreen entries with gnomesession. You can
use the deskutils/splashsetter port to choose the one you like best.
As always, GNOME users should _not_ use portupgrade alone to upgrade to
2.10. Instead, get the gnome_upgrade.sh script from
http://www.FreeBSD.org/gnome/gnome_upgrade.sh.
Enjoy!
o) Fix autoconf problem with pthread lib in conjuction with
compile for postgresql as database
(tracked down by "Anthony Chavez" <acc@anthonychavez.org>)
PR: ports/78477
Submitted by: Dan Langille <dan@langille.org>
be compiled by LaTeX 3 as it was attempted to convert it to PDF
instead of DVI now. This eventually caused the entire build to fall
over, as the EPS picture files to be included were no longer be looked
up by the .eps suffix.
Also, now that avr-binutils and avr-gcc can handle the newer AVR
devices (ATmega48/88/168, ATtiny13/2313, AT90CAN128, ATmega325/3250,
ATmega645/6450), the configure script automatically causes crt*.o
files for these devices to be compiled and installed, so reflect this
in the pkg-plist. This makes these new device types fully supported
in the FreeBSD AVR toolchain (as they are in the popular WinAVR
toolchain already).
The new doxygen version present in the ports also causes a slightly
different directory layout for the generated docs, so adapt
pkg-plist.doc accordingly.
With PEAR::File_SMBPasswd you can maintain smbpasswd-files, usualy used by
SAMBA.
PR: ports/78642
Submitted by: Antonio Carlos Venancio Junior <antonio@php.net>
Currently these types of CHAP are supported:
* CHAP-MD5
* MS-CHAPv1
* MS-CHAPv2
PR: ports/78641
Submitted by: Antonio Carlos Venancio Junior <antonio@php.net>
emulator and provides a uniform, object-based interface for the
Berkeley-style database systems.
PR: ports/78600
Submitted by: Antonio Carlos Venancio Junior <antonio@php.net>
datastructures. It allows building of directed and undirected graphs, with
data and metadata stored in nodes. The library provides functions for graph
traversing as well as for characteristic extraction from the graph topology.
PR: ports/78624
Submitted by: Antonio Carlos Venancio Junior <antonio@php.net>
the data. It's a good company of planner.el. You can use Remember.el to add
note to planner.el "on the fly".
PR: ports/78617
Submitted by: Dryice Liu <dryice@liu.com.cn>
your pending and completed tasks, daily schedule, dates to remember, notes and
inspirations. It is a powerful tool not only for managing your time and
productivity, but also for keeping within easy keystroke reach all of the
information you need to be productive. It can even publish reports charting
your work for your personal web page, your conscience, or your
soon-to-be-impressed boss.
PR: ports/78615
Submitted by: Dryice Liu <dryice@liu.com.cn>