update the relevant page if the port is updated.
- more precise license marker.
No package change. ok Brad (maintainer) after a small adjustment
to my diff.
Diff from Nicholas Marriott (MAINTAINER), who also notes that this
update will break existing 0.5 configurations. See the CHANGES and
NOTES files for more information. Thanks!
- major crash fixes: "If you have stability issues with
any previous release, please upgrade to this one."
- minor bugfixes, updates
- ipv6 support
- "noreply" mode for many commands
- out of memory errors more clear
- added eviction/OOM tracking per slab class
GNU Teseq is a tool for analyzing files that contain control characters
and terminal control sequences. It is intended to be useful for diagnosing
terminal emulators, and programs that make heavy use of terminal
features (such as those based on the Curses library).
The User::Identity object is created to maintain a set of informational
objects which are related to one user. The User::Identity module tries
to be smart providing defaults, conversions and often required
combinations.
This module provides a framework to produce sprite animations using
ASCII art. Each ASCII 'sprite' is given one or more frames, and placed
into the animation as an 'animation entity'. An animation entity can
have a callback routine.
from Girish Venkatachalam (MAINTAINER) with tweaks by me
"Andreas Tille, the Debian WordNet maintainer, noticed a bug in my
patch. The bug is not security related, but causes incorrect behaviour
in WordNet.
I replaced a strncpy(s1, s2, strlen(s2)) with a strcpy forgetting that
strncpy invoked that way would always omit the trailing \0 (as the \0
would always be at strlen(s2) + 1). This resulted in a truncation of
output from WordNet which relied on the previous behavior which it
used to 'patch' s1. I've now adjusted the strncpy to be a memcpy and
added a comment, to make the intent of the code clear. (Using a str*
function when you don't wish any handling of \0 is unintuitive to me,
hence my mistake). [..] Apologies for the error."
thanks Rob for the exemplary handling of this advisory. Notifications
to package maintainers and follow-ups are almost unheard-of and very
welcome.
WordNet stack and heap overflows. Thanks to Rob Holland
of oCERT for contacting us with the advisory.
- housekeeping: regenerate PLIST, move to Tcl/Tk 8.5,
use SUBST_CMD macro rather than hand-rolled command.
- gcc4 is needed to build this now
* improved force fields and coordinate generation, conformer searching,
enhanced plugins including molecular descriptors, filters, and
command-line transformations
* many formats improved or added, including CIF, mmCIF, Gaussian cube,
PQR, OpenDX cubes, and more
* improved developer API and scripting support
* many, many bugfixes
# cat pkg/DESCR
Dates is a small, lightweight calendar, featuring an innovative,
unified, zooming view and is designed primarily for use on hand-held
devices.
ok ajacoutot@
Contacts is a small, lightweight addressbook that uses libebook, part of
EDS. This is the same library that GNOME Evolution uses, so all contact
data that exists in your Evolution addressbook is accessible via
Contacts. Contacts features advanced vCard field type handling.
tmux is a "terminal multiplexer", it enables a number of terminals (or
windows) to be accessed and controlled from a single terminal. tmux is
intended to be a simple, modern, BSD-licensed alternative to programs
such as GNU screen.
port made by brynet at gmail, and Nicholas Marriott (maintainer)
gtk-update-icon-cache is part of gtk+2: adding gtk+2 to run_depends just
to update the icon cache (which only gtk apps can use) is overkill to
say the least!
As from now, each time icons are installed under %D/share/icons, we try
to execute gtk-update-icon-cache and if it is not there, we just ignore
the error.
What it means is that if you have gtk+2 installed, then it'll run fine
and your apps will be able to use the cache. Otherwise, it will silently
fails which is fine since it means none of your apps would have been
able to take advantage of the cache anyway.
discussed with jasper@
Supercat is a program that colorizes text based on matching regular
expressions/strings/characters. Supercat supports html output as well as
standard ASCII text. Unlike some text-colorizing programs that exist,
Supercat does not require you to have to be a programmer to make
colorization rules.
from Girish Venkatachalam
tweaks from Giovanni Bechis
ok merdely@ kili@