by me):
Libev is a high-performance event loop/event model with lots of
features. It is modelled (very loosely) after libevent and the Event
perl module, but aims to be faster and more correct, and also more
featureful. And also smaller.
(actually, really import the files. Oh yeah, cvs i love you so much.)
Also:
* Native make now works fine so don't use gmake.
* Disable storing of plaintext passwords for all servers in the system-wide
'servers' config file, instead of disabling storage of all kinds of
passwords in the system-wide 'config' config file.
The new store-plaintext-passwords=no option, which has existed since 1.6.0,
overrides a yes/no prompt which subversion now usually presents before
storing passwords in plaintext. gnome-keyring stores passwords encrypted.
* Update the main DESCR to reflect current reality.
* Add a patch which fixes a broken regression test in the ruby bindings
which accidentally slipped into 1.6.5 release.
* Put the gnome-keyring subpackage into REGRESS_DEPENDS to make
auth-test pass (it loads DSOs at runtime and can't find them if
the gnome-keyring subpackage isn't installed).
Tested on i386 by me and alek@, on i386/amd64 by steven@,
and on sparc64 by Edd Barrett.
ok steven@
This used to be needed but with the current libtool it breaks
the library order in some cases (including xenocara) for static
only archictectures.
ok naddy@.
cvs2svn is a tool to migrate as much information as possible from
an existing CVS repository on a local filesystem to a new Subversion
or GIT repository.
It is able to infer information about changesets by looking at
which files were committed together and attempts to reconstruct as
much of your CVS repository's history as possible.
Intermediate data is stored to on-disk databases so that cvs2svn
can convert very large CVS repositories using a reasonable amount
of RAM. Conversions are organized as multiple passes and can be
restarted at an arbitrary pass in the case of problems.
Polyglot provides a registry of file types that can be loaded by calling
its improved version of require.
This supports the creation of DSLs having a syntax that is most
appropriate to their purpose, instead of abusing the Ruby syntax.
ok bernd@