possible values for the wakeup-batteries-capacity register. Add a
few more values i've obtained from my SmartUPS 1400.
Also, make apc.c print out the name of the register in case some
`tune' operation for an APC_TOGGLE type register failed, so the
operator gets a clue about what went wrong.
Maybe i'll someday even find the time to write up a short man page
for all this...
Patches incorporated by the author were removed. One new patch created
to prevent core dumps when running non-listening queue-runners.
Handle the difference in BINOWN between stable (bin) and current (root),
obviating the need for an INSTALL script.
Don't install shell script "place-holders" for eximon when built without
USE_XLIB, just touch the files for package-friendliness. Graceful.
Improve out-of-the-box relay handling; localhost symoblic name was weak,
use private subnet numerical net instead.
Submitted by: maintainer
This program is an up to date version of the ttcp program.
It uses inetd (or simulates its behaviour) to start off the remote
side program which will send/receive data. Both sides measure the time
and number of bytes transfered. The local side will print the measures.
The format of the output can be specified on the commandline.
PR: ports/8546
Bad MASTER_SITE by: vanilla
(I really need this new file fetching protocol vanilla has. It appears to be
quite magical as it can pull distfiles out of thin air)
Adds a new target for Intel MMX chips. (AMD K-6 already had their own target)
Define "HAVE_MMX" to turn on optimizations for Intel MMX chipes.
Define "HAVE_K6" to turn on opts for AMD K6 chips.
Add a second MASTER_SITE that is probably the same machine as the 1st...
but maybe a different protocol will work if the 1st site won't answer.
Does anybody know of a mirror for this stuff?
dispite their meanings. (Sometimes we're too smart for computers. :)
Found by: sorting ports/INDEX by "sort -t '|' +1 -2"
(Note: the whole "x11" category appears at the end with the above sort
command, but I'll leave that the way it is for now -- "ls" shows it
before other x11-* entries.)
dispite their meanings. (Sometimes we're too smart for computers. :)
Found by: sorting ports/INDEX by "sort -t '|' +1 -2"
(Note: the whole "x11" category appears at the end with the above sort
command, but I'll leave that the way it is for now -- "ls" shows it
before other x11-* entries.)
"elf.h" header file is found (assumption was System V.4, which made later
configure tests fail).
Make myself maintainer of this port (as suggested by the previous
maintainer: joerg).