- change HOMEPAGE, tweak COMMENT and reorder Makefile
I doubt this works since our libgtop2 is next to unusable but at least
it gives a better base to work on.
with tweaks by me.
Pipe Viewer (pv) is a terminal-based tool for monitoring the progress
of data through a pipeline. It can be inserted into any normal
pipeline between two processes to give a visual indication of how
quickly data is passing through, how long it has taken, how near
to completion it is and estimate of how long it will be until
completion.
login_fingerprint provides a fingerprint authentication mechanism,
using libfprint. You can basically use it to login to you system
with a fingerprint instead of your password
TestDisk is a powerful free data recovery software! It was primarily
designed to help recover lost partitions and/or make non-booting disks
bootable again when these symptoms are caused by faulty software,
certain types of viruses or human error (such as accidentally deleting a
Partition Table). Partition table recovery using TestDisk is really
easy.
PhotoRec is a file data recovery software designed to recover lost files
including video, documents and archives from Hard Disks and CDRom and
lost pictures (thus, its 'Photo Recovery' name) from digital camera
memory. PhotoRec ignores the filesystem and goes after the underlying
data, so it will still work even if your media's filesystem has been
severely damaged or re-formatted.
with feedback from pea@, thanks!
- Remove MAINTAINERS as they agree not having time nor interest for it.
- Use install-libs target instead of manually installing some cherrypicked
headers - now all needed headers are installed in the right place.
- Install fsck and its manpage as fsck_ext2fs instead of the confusing pfsck.
- Install uuid.pc as e2fs-uuid.pc to avoid conflicts with devel/uuid.
- Patch most Makefiles to print full build commands instead of the
non-informative linux-kernel-like output.
- Patch some regress tests, more and more works fine now.
With feedback and tweaks from naddy@ and pea@
- fix mbuf monitor following h2k8 mclpl changes
no reply from the maintainer in a couple of days; my syslog server
isn't super-happy about how often the problem with mbuf gets logged,
so committing anyway. tests/feedback from Alexander Hall and Markus
Lude - thanks.
Memtest86+ is thorough, stand alone memory test for Intel i386 architecture
systems, based on the well-known Memtest86 written by Chris Brady.
ok sturm@
with >=2GB swap
- replace kvm reads with sysctl()
this change brings some useful improvements in the process:
* it fixes the disk plugin
* if you don't care about TCP connection statistics, then running sgid
is not needed anymore
all work done by Josh Elsasser, thank you!
"functionality-wise: thumbs up!" sturm@
D-Feet is a D-Bus debugger written in PyGtk+.
Current features:
* View names on any bus
* View exported objects, interfaces, methods and signals
* View the full command line of services on the bus
* Execute methods with parameters on the bus and see their return
values
- don't assume that usb_descriptor_t has a field bDescriptorSubtype,
this field is class specific and shouldn't be there
- make fetch of hub descriptors in usbctl work (by setting the
correct request value)
- before reading a string descriptor, read the language table and
use a correct language code if possible
- install usbgen(8) manual, regen plist, bump
mostly from pkgsrc,
http://cvsweb.netbsd.org/bsdweb.cgi/pkgsrc/sysutils/usbutil/patches/patch-ab
While here, update PLISTs, some WANTLIBs, some license
markers and use MODPY_EGG_VERSION where it may help to
keep future PLIST diffs smaller.
help, nitpicking and ok jasper@, ok wcmaier@
note that print/py-reportlab/reportlab needs some more
love.
faubackup uses a filesystem on a hard drive for incremental and full backups.
All backups can easily be accessed by standard filesystem tools. Later backups
to the same filesystem will automatically be incremental, as unchanged files
are only hard-linked with the existing version of the file.
from Sebastian Trahm <basti at schleifi.com>
RANCID monitors a router's (or more generally a device's)
configuration, including software and hardware (cards, serial numbers,
etc) and uses CVS (Concurrent Version System) to maintain history of
changes.
With help and advices from okan@ (thanks very much !)
ok okan@ ajacoutot@
HCIdump reads raw HCI data coming from and going to a Bluetooth device
and prints to screen commands, events and data in a human-readable form.
Optionally, the dump can be written to a file rather than parsed, and
the dump file can be parsed in a subsequent moment.
from jcs@, with some tweaks by me
requested by uwe@
serious bug in Bacula that causes jobs to be orphaned or "stuck" in
the director during the pruning process'. Bacula users are advised
to upgrade their directors.
ok merdely
Add no_server PSEUDO_FLAVOR
Reorganize the Makefile some.
Remove dependency on qwt.
Set FULLPKGPATH for -main and -bat to remove backend dependencies
(found by and solution from naddy@)
Use SUBST_CMD.
ok jdixon@, okan@
ndesk-dbus is a C# implementation of D-Bus. It's often referred
to as dbus-sharp, or "managed D-Bus" to avoid confusion with
existing bindings (which wrap libdbus).
D-Bus is an inter-process communication framework that lets
applications interface with the system event bus as well as
allowing them to talk to one another in a peer-to-peer
configuration.
This module provides GLib integration as an optional extra.
ndesk-dbus is a C# implementation of D-Bus. It's often referred
to as dbus-sharp, or "managed D-Bus" to avoid confusion with
existing bindings (which wrap libdbus).
D-Bus is an inter-process communication framework that lets
applications interface with the system event bus as well as
allowing them to talk to one another in a peer-to-peer
configuration.
The EventLog library aims to be a replacement of the simple syslog() API
provided on UNIX systems. The major difference between EventLog and syslog
is that EventLog tries to add structure to messages.
- upsimage.cgi used upsimage_cgi_LDFLAGS to tweak for -all-static,
and not *_LDADD as upsstats.cgi and upsset.cgi did. as a result
upsimage.cgi was linked dynamically, therefore broken inside chroot
- add USE_GMAKE, so that it builds on landisk
- make lib-depends-check happy
- add @bin marker for bin/snmp-ups
- bump all PKGNAMEs
ok sthen@
(now called agiler-old)
upses such as the below can now work again:
{0x0665, 0x5161, &agiler_old_subdriver}, /* Belkin F6C1200-UNV */
{0x06da, 0x0003, &agiler_old_subdriver}, /* Mustek Powermust */
{0x0f03, 0x0001, &agiler_old_subdriver}, /* Unitek Alpha 1200Sx *
ok sthen@
- fix PATHs in documentation
- add a default gkrellmd.conf
- make the server use the unpriviledged _gkrellmd user by default
- add sparc64 to the list of apm(4) capable arches and s/powerpc/macppc
'gateway' addres/ports does not work (yet) due to the address handling
changes in pf. Other functionality should work. Also fixes two minor
bugs reported by many. Suggestions and ok naddy@
Duplicity incrementally backs up files and directory by encrypting
tar-format volumes with GnuPG and uploading them to a remote (or local)
file server. Currently local, ftp, ssh/scp, rsync, WebDAV, WebDAVs, HSi
and Amazon S3 backends are available. Because duplicity uses librsync,
the incremental archives are space efficient and only record the parts
of files that have changed since the last backup. Currently duplicity
supports deleted files, full unix permissions, directories, symbolic
links, fifos, etc., but not hard links.
The duplicity package also includes the rdiffdir utility. Rdiffdir is
an extension of librsync's rdiff to directories - it can be used to
produce signatures and deltas of directories as well as regular files.
These signatures and deltas are in GNU tar format.
based on the original submission from Bruno Bigras <bruno@burnbox.net>
feedback and ok wcmaier@ merdely@
Stan is a console application that analyzes binary streams and
calculates several useful statistical information from the observed
data. It features statistical, pattern and bit analysis. Stan has been
designed as a "swiss-knife" for first steps in reverse engineering and
cryptographic analysis.
from zinovik at kspu.karelia.ru (MAINTAINER), with tweaks by me.
rpl is a UN*X text replacement utility. It will replace strings with new
strings in multiple text files. It can work recursively over directories
and supports limiting the search to specific file suffixes.
From James Turner (james - bsdgroup dot org)
ok mbalmer@
this allows famd to run much more reliably, especially under KDE and
GNOME; if someone wants to fix the imon emulation through kqueue, be my
guest... meanwhile, I'd rather use stable software
- more typos fixes in man pages while here
"go ahead" fgsch@, "looks correct" jasper@
Apple's Time Machine is a great feature in their OS, and UNIX has
almost all of the required technology already built in to recreate it.
This is a simple GUI to make it easy to use.
help and ok ajacoutot@
this ensures that changes to syscalls alter the package signature.
Bump package and note with XXX. Without this, packages using it
(e.g. MailScanner) will abort trap.
ok/suggestion to add WANTLIB from espie.
This is a tool to make it easy for end-users to install open-source
Rails apps. It was originally created for Typo, and has been
extracted so other projects can use it as well.
Joint work with maintainer Paul Irofti.
KRename is a powerful batch renamer for KDE. It allows you to easily
rename hundreds or even more files in one go. The filenames can be
created by parts of the original filename, numbering the files or
accessing hundreds of informations about the file, like creation date or
Exif informations of an image, thanks to KDE file plugins.
Based on a submission by Vadim Zhukov
<persgray at gmail dot com> (MAINTAINER)
- Better AD support
- Better SSL/TLS support
- Alternate server support
NOTE: The config file format has changed from version <= 3.3, refer to
the man page and examples.
I've taken over maintainership (with OK from previous MAINTAINER). And
moved the project to Sourceforge.
openldap testing by William Yodlowsky < bsd + openbsd - rutgers - edu >
ok landry, okan
Vlad the Deployer is pragmatic application deployment automation,
without mercy. Much like Capistrano, but with 1/10th the
complexity. Vlad integrates seamlessly with Rake, and uses familiar
and standard tools like ssh and rsync.
Impale your application on the heartless spike of the Deployer.
Bacula changelog:
http://bacula.svn.sourceforge.net/viewvc/bacula/branches/Branch-2.2/bacula/ChangeLog?revision=6309&view=markup
Major port change in this version:
-main subpackage is now bacula-client
-server subpackage remains bacula-server
-bat subpackage is new bacula admin tool
-client subpackage goes away.
If the old -main subpackage was installed, the upgrade path is to
install both bacula-client and bacula-server.
Lots of input and assistance from sthen and okan.
ok okan; "if it works for you, go for it" sthen
Capistrano is a utility and framework for executing commands in parallel
on multiple remote machines, via SSH. It uses a simple DSL (borrowed in
part from Rake that allows you to define _tasks_), which may be applied
to machines in certain roles. It also supports tunneling connections via
some gateway machine to allow operations to be performed behind VPN's
and firewalls.
Capistrano was originally designed to simplify and automate deployment
of web applications to distributed environments, and originally came
bundled with a set of tasks designed for deploying Rails applications.
This library comes from the gksu program. It provides a Gtk+ dialog and
X authentication facilities for running programs as root or another user
in a X session.
ok martynas@
This library comes from the gksu program. It provides a simple API to
use su and sudo in programs that need to execute tasks as other user. It
provides X authentication facilities for running programs in a X
session.
ok martynas@