to djb's `daemontools` or the Ruby project `god`. It's goals are to keep
a set of services running, and to facilitate the easy configuration and
restart of those services.
WWW: http://github.com/jamwt/Angel
Obtained from: FreeBSD Haskell
balances mismatched tags, so that there shouldn't be any parse failures.
It does not handle a full HTML document rendering, such as adding missing
html and head tags.
WWW: https://github.com/snoyberg/xml
Obtained from: FreeBSD Haskell
parse unstructured and malformed HTML from the web. It also provides an
Enumeratee which can parse streamline html, which means it consumes constant
memory. You can start from the `tests/Tests.hs` module to see what it can
do.
WWW: http://github.com/yihuang/tagstream-conduit
Obtained from: FreeBSD Haskell
Ruby library RSpec. However, Hspec is just a framework for running
HUnit and QuickCheck tests. Compared to other options, it provides a
much nicer syntax that makes tests very easy to read.
WWW: http://hspec.github.com/
Obtained from: FreeBSD Haskell
devel/hs-binary: this package became part of lang/ghc.
devel/hs-convertible-text: this package is obsolete.
devel/hs-control-monad-attempt: this package is obsolete.
devel/hs-data-object: this package is obsolete.
devel/hs-data-object-yaml: this package is obsolete.
devel/hs-deepseq: this package became part of lang/ghc.
devel/hs-ghc-paths-docs: not needed any more.
devel/hs-haddock-docs: not needed any more.
devel/hs-mtl-docs: not needed any more.
devel/hs-pool: this package is obsolete.
devel/hs-transformers-docs: not needed any more.
print/hs-hscolour-docs: not needed any more.
textproc/hs-xhtml-docs: not needed any more.
textproc/hs-xml-enumerator: this package is obsolete.
www/hs-happstack-data: this package is obsolete.
www/hs-happstack-ixset: this package is obsolete.
www/hs-happstack-state: this package is obsolete.
www/hs-happstack-util: this package is obsolete.
www/hs-http-enumerator: this package is obsolete.
Obtained from: FreeBSD Haskell
Please note that port revision for all the Haskell ports without version changes
are also bumped. Other per-port updates are coming soon (in separate commits)!
In addition to that, separate -docs ports are no longer needed so they are
now removed.
Thanks ashish@ for the assistance.
Obtained from: FreeBSD Haskell
on top of wxWidgets, a comprehensive C++ library that is portable across
all major GUI platforms, including GTK, Windows, X11, and MacOS X. This
version works with wxWidgets 2.9 only. Distributed under the WXWINDOWS
LIBRARY LICENSE. Please see LICENSE file, but note that this is essentially
LGPL with an exception allowing binary distribution of proprietary software.
This is the same license as wxWidgets itself uses.
WWW: http://haskell.org/haskellwiki/WxHaskell
Obtained from: FreeBSD Haskell
connection. It also provides higher-level functions which allow you to
avoid direct usage of enumerators.
WWW: http://www.yesodweb.com/book/http-conduit
Obtained from: FreeBSD Haskell
based on the datatypes found in the xml-types package. This package is
broken up into the following modules:
* Text.XML: DOM-based parsing and rendering. This is the most commonly
used module.
* Text.XML.Cursor: A wrapper around Text.XML which allows bidirectional
traversing of the DOM, similar to XPath.
* Text.XML.Unresolved: A slight modification to Text.XML which does not
require all entities to be resolved at parsing. The datatypes are
slightly more complicated here, and therefore this module is only
recommended when you need to deal directly with raw entities.
* Text.XML.Stream.Parse: Streaming parser, including some streaming
parser combinators.
* Text.XML.Stream.Render: Streaming renderer.
WWW: http://github.com/snoyberg/xml
Obtained from: FreeBSD Haskell
Tango math library; approximate and exact equality comparisons for general
types.
WWW: http://github.com/patperry/hs-ieee754
Obtained from: FreeBSD Haskell
like having first-class access to the storage space behind IORefs. The
data structure is analogous to a bank vault, where you can access different
bank boxes with different keys; hence the name. Also provided is a "locker"
type, representing a store for a single element.
WWW: https://github.com/HeinrichApfelmus/vault
Obtained from: FreeBSD Haskell
library are quite limited. The unixutils package contains some good ones,
but they aren't portable to Windows. This library just repackages the
Cabal implementations of its own temporary file and folder functions so
that you can use them without linking against Cabal or depending on it
being installed.
WWW: http://www.github.com/batterseapower/temporary
Obtained from: FreeBSD Haskell
an alternative to enumerators/iterators, hoping to address the same
issues with different trade-offs based on real-world experience with
enumerators.
WWW: http://github.com/snoyberg/conduit
Obtained from: FreeBSD Haskell
suitable for low-level shared-memory synchronization. The implementation
is using GCC's builtin atomic operations (available in GCC >= 4) in C
wrappers called through the FFI.
WWW: http://hackage.haskell.org/package/bits-atomic
Obtained from: FreeBSD Haskell
provided by the 'parallel' package. A Par monad allows the simple
description of parallel computations, and can be used to add parallelism
to pure Haskell code. The basic API is straightforward: a Par monad
supports forking and simple communication in terms of IVars. This module
is an interface module only. It provides a number of type clasess, but
not an implementation. The type classes separate different levels of Par
functionality.
WWW: https://github.com/simonmar/monad-par
Obtained from: FreeBSD Haskell
There exists a feature space for queues that extends between:
* simple, single-ended, non-concurrent, bounded queues
* double-ended, threadsafe, growable queues
... with important points inbetween (such as the queues used for
work-stealing). This package includes an interface for Deques that
allows the programmer to use a single API for all of the above, while
using the type-system to select an efficient implementation given the
requirements (using type families). This package also includes a simple
reference implementation based on 'IORef' and "Data.Sequence".
WWW: http://hackage.haskell.org/package/abstract-deque
Obtained from: FreeBSD Haskell