If we need to make an exception we can do it and properly document the
reason but by default we should just use the default login class.
rc.d uses daemon or the login class provided in login.conf.d so this has
no impact there.
discussed with sthen@, tb@ and robert@
praying that my grep/sed skills did not break anything and still
believing in portbump :-)
If we need to make an exception we can do it and properly document the
reason but by default we should just use the default login class.
rc.d uses daemon or the login class provided in login.conf.d so this has
no impact there.
discussed with sthen@, tb@ and robert@
praying that my grep/sed skills did not break anything and still
believing in portbump :-)
Tifffile is a Python library to
- store NumPy arrays in TIFF (Tagged Image File Format) files, and
- read image and metadata from TIFF-like files used in bioimaging.
Image and metadata can be read from TIFF, BigTIFF, OME-TIFF, STK, LSM,
SGI, NIHImage, ImageJ, MicroManager, FluoView, ScanImage, SEQ, GEL, SVS,
SCN, SIS, BIF, ZIF (Zoomable Image File Format), QPTIFF (QPI), NDPI, and
GeoTIFF files.
Image data can be read as NumPy arrays or Zarr arrays/groups from
strips, tiles, pages (IFDs), SubIFDs, higher order series, and pyramidal
levels.
Image data can be written to TIFF, BigTIFF, OME-TIFF, and ImageJ
hyperstack compatible files in multi-page, volumetric, pyramidal,
memory-mappable, tiled, predicted, or compressed form.
Tifffile can also be used to inspect TIFF structures, read image data
from multi-dimensional file sequences, write fsspec ReferenceFileSystem
for TIFF files and image file sequences, patch TIFF tag values, and
parse many proprietary metadata formats.
TCP_TIME is defined in tcp_var.h as a macro under #ifdef _KERNEL, but used
used without #ifdef in tcp_timer.h in the definitions of TCPTV_MIN,
TCPTV_REXMTMAX, TCPTV_SRTTDFLT
setuptools but now no longer needs a RUN_DEPENDS on setuptools which
MODPY_SETUPTOOLS wants to add; this port can't use MODPY_PYBUILD because
it's part of the py-build scaffolding itself).