https://github.com/getsentry/responses/blob/master/CHANGES
A number of minor changes along with official Python 3.8 support.
Drop the python2 FLAVOR. The only consumer (audio/beets) just uses the
python3 FLAVOR.
(Include necessary quirks)
ok sthen
Notable changes:
- Remove unveil(2) for stagit-index specifically. Per repository it
will still use unveil(2).
From maintainer Hiltjo Posthuma, thanks!
Catalyst::Controller::ActionRole is a perl module that apply roles to
action instances.
From wen heping <wenheping2000 () hotmail ! com>
OK + tweak cwen@
from wen heping; OK cwen@
Comment:
WebSocket support for URI package
Description:
After this module is installed, the URI package provides the same
set of methods for WebSocket URIs as it does for HTTP ones. For
secure WebSockets, see URI::wss.
CGI::Struct lets you transform CGI data keys that look like perl data
structures into actual perl data structures.
From Wen Heping <wenheping2000 () hotmail ! com>
OK afresh1@
This module is XS implementation of CGI::Struct. It's fully compatible
with CGI::Struct, except for error messages. CGI::Struct::XS is 3-15(5-25
with dclone disabled) times faster than original module.
From Wen Heping <wenheping2000 () hotmail ! com>, with a WANTLIB tweak from me.
OK afresh1@
This Action handles doing automatic method dispatching for REST
requests. It takes a normal Catalyst action, and changes the dispatch
to append an underscore and method name. First it will try dispatching
to an action with the generated name, and failing that it will try to
dispatch to a regular method.
OK afresh1@
Writing RESTful apps is a good thing, but if you're also trying to
support web browsers, it would be nice not to be reduced to GET
and POST for everything.
This middleware allows for POST requests that pretend to be something
else: by adding either a header named X-HTTP-Method-Override to the
request, or a query parameter named x-tunneled-method to the URI, the
client can say what method it actually meant.
From wen heping <wenheping2000 () hotmail ! com>
OK benoit@
Looks like the same failure that happened on powerpc can also happen on
i386, so always compile the missing function when building on OpenBSD
(not just on 64 bits systems). Maybe a C++ type mismatch between us and
other systems.
powerpc test by cwen@, ok cwen@ ajacoutot@ (maintainer)