- update p5-Data-UUID to 1.148

- reformat DESCR

"feel free" kevlo@
This commit is contained in:
jasper 2008-10-05 22:03:42 +00:00
parent 304a1e33b5
commit 5b74b27a90
3 changed files with 17 additions and 17 deletions

View File

@ -1,11 +1,10 @@
# $OpenBSD: Makefile,v 1.10 2008/10/02 20:35:09 simon Exp $
# $OpenBSD: Makefile,v 1.11 2008/10/05 22:03:42 jasper Exp $
SHARED_ONLY= Yes
COMMENT= extension for generating GUIDs/UUIDs
MODULES= cpan
DISTNAME= Data-UUID-0.148
PKGNAME= p5-${DISTNAME}p0
DISTNAME= Data-UUID-1.148
CATEGORIES= devel
MAINTAINER= Kevin Lo <kevlo@openbsd.org>

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
MD5 (Data-UUID-0.148.tar.gz) = rNJiOUs9GHquqeZGd62+bA==
RMD160 (Data-UUID-0.148.tar.gz) = H9/jniRAXOIZyvevRmJchOswHVo=
SHA1 (Data-UUID-0.148.tar.gz) = osyWmVa82TWi3FCJyWwvN3lXjgM=
SHA256 (Data-UUID-0.148.tar.gz) = snGWpDwC1yZjXA7uSxz1tFO3rSdmKXxe09KC3aHHIqc=
SIZE (Data-UUID-0.148.tar.gz) = 15146
MD5 (Data-UUID-1.148.tar.gz) = I8z0UqeY6GWCHDsHcKX3Ng==
RMD160 (Data-UUID-1.148.tar.gz) = 2xWC4DpYxjV9heod2CXTkm52FtU=
SHA1 (Data-UUID-1.148.tar.gz) = dqYU3TPTNYRBGT4/oCdWJU3DU0A=
SHA256 (Data-UUID-1.148.tar.gz) = RqVpBG9JJUKIMxVX8Hi0ymP+I02Yo9PdxKo3PEDA+NU=
SIZE (Data-UUID-1.148.tar.gz) = 15386

View File

@ -1,9 +1,10 @@
This module provides a framework for generating UUIDs (Universally Unique
Identifiers, also known as GUIDs (Globally Unique Identifiers). A UUID is
128 bits long, and is guaranteed to be different from all other UUIDs/GUIDs
generated until 3400 A.D. UUIDs were originally used in the Network Computing
System (NCS) and later in the Open Software Foundation's (OSF) Distributed
Computing Environment. Currently many different technologies rely on UUIDs to
provide unique identity for various software components, Microsoft COM/DCOM
for instance, uses GUIDs very extensively to uniquely identify classes,
applications and components across network-connected systems.
This module provides a framework for generating UUIDs (Universally
Unique Identifiers, also known as GUIDs (Globally Unique Identifiers). A
UUID is 128 bits long, and is guaranteed to be different from all other
UUIDs/GUIDs generated until 3400 A.D. UUIDs were originally used in the
Network Computing System (NCS) and later in the Open Software
Foundation's (OSF) Distributed Computing Environment. Currently many
different technologies rely on UUIDs to provide unique identity for
various software components, Microsoft COM/DCOM for instance, uses GUIDs
very extensively to uniquely identify classes, applications and
components across network-connected systems.