The wait_on command allows shell scripts to access the facilities provided by
kqueue(3). This allows scripts to detect files being added to directories, data
appended to files and many other things - all without polling.
Submitted by: Andrew Stevenson <andrew@ugh.net.au>
PR: ports/34414
displays memory and swap space usage. It is very heavily based on WMMemMon
and WMCPULoad.
PR: 38073
Submitted by: Alexey Dokuchaev <danfe@regency.nsu.ru>
rclean provides a command-line tool to order and clean content of
rc.conf, using option order from /etc/defaults/rc.conf and printing only
choices that were different by the default value in /etc/rc.conf.
PR: ports/37593
Submitted by: Lapo Luchini <lapo@lapo.it>
original versions of these ports, so some PORTREVISIONs were bumped. See
http://freebsd.kde.org/ and mailing lists linked to from there for info
on the packages generated to test these ports.
bsd.kde.mk has already been updated a few days ago to work with these.
Some patches applied to fix a few bugs were:
deskutils/kdepim3:
[1] Remove kpilot from build because it wasn't ready at release.
editors/koffice-kde3:
[2] Fix compile time bugs for FreeBSD.
misc/kdeedu3:
[3] Fix compile problem with kvoctrain.
x11/kdebase3:
[4] Fix KDM CPU usage and login bug.
Some caveats:
* All PLISTs are broken for deinstall due to script bug that I
didn't notice until very recently. This will be fixed when I
commit an update tomorrow. These ports should still install
perfectly fine though. They should also deinstall without
giving errors, but will leave directories behind.
* You can't install this with any other version of QT or KDE
already installed. I am not sure the checks are 100% working,
but fixes for these will be forthcoming. This is mainly due
to a policy decision made by kde@ to make QT/KDE ports install
the way the rest of the world expects it to while also still
conforming to FreeBSD's hier(7). For reference on this decision,
please consult the KDE/FreeBSD mailing list archives. This
decision fixes 2-year-old bug reports relating to how we handled
this for KDE2 vs KDE1.
Submitted by: [1] Adrian de Groot <adridg@cs.kun.nl>,
[2] David Faure <faure@kde.org>,
Andy Fawcett <andy@athame.co.uk>
Lauri Watts <lauri@kde.org>
[3] Lauri Watts <lauri@kde.org>
[4] Alan Eldridge <alane@geeksrus.net>
Oswald Buddenhagen <ossi@kde.org>
Reviewed by: kde
Logmon will monitor one or more log files, updating when more data is
available ala 'tail -f' , within a common terminal window via a "split window".
User can scroll up/down/left/right through all the windows.
PR: 30516
Submitted by: Gea-Suan Lin <gslin@infomath.math.nctu.edu.tw>
penv - 'program environment' or 'ports environment' - is a simple
utility that executes a given command after setting some environment
variables corresponding to the current directory. This makes it
much easier to keep persistent environment settings for building
the same ports over and over again.
For example, the following series of commands:
$ echo cp1251 > /var/db/penv/databases/mysql323-server/WITH_CHARSET
$ echo all > /var/db/penv/databases/mysql323-server/WITH_XCHARSET
..allows a simple way to build the MySQL-3.23 server with the same
character set configuration every time by doing:
[root@ringworld:/usr/ports/databases/mysql323-server]# penv make
For more information, see the penv.1 manual page and the sample
configuration file in the penv distribution.