clarify comment and pkg-descr to make clear that ices0 is for streaming mp3s,
add an rc-script, optionalize most dependencies, do not depend on lame by
default in order to enable the build of a binary package.
While here, modify comment of ices as well to make perfectly clear that ices
is for vorbis streaming.
Based on a submission by: "Dave" <dmehler26@woh.rr.com>
and these ports build fine without it. My guess is that it was added
by someone as an opposite to USE_BZIP2 and other people copied it.
Remove it once and for all.
With hat: portmgr
[NOTE]
At this point in time, original site was initialized. Because
I saw http://www.linet.gr.jp/ as CentOS page. I think that
www.linet.gr.jp server will resurrect:-).
Pointed out by: pointyhat via kris
Schwendt. This version is written by Simon White and is cycle accurate for
improved sound reproduction. Sidplay 2 is capable of playing all C64 mono and
stereo file formats.
WWW: http://sidplay2.sourceforge.net/
PR: ports/98762
Submitted by: Alexander Botero-Lowry <alex@foxybanana.com>
Approved by: lawrance (mentor, implicit)
an open source software, but freely available for i386 versions of
FreeBSD 4.X/5.X and Linux. This port installs the Linux binary.
WWW: http://www.shoutcast.com
PR: ports/95514
Submitted by: Gabor Kovesdan
Approved by: lawrance(mentor, implicit)
the sources.
- don't overwrite .conf file and install it as .saple also
- fix pkg-deinstall
- add CONLFICTS with upcomming linux binary port
- bump PORTREVISION
Submitted by: maintainer
Approved by: lawrance (mentor, implicit)
an amd64 machine, there are several reports that there is one, so don't
let it break the build.
PR: 97580
Submitted by: "O. Hartmann" <hartmann@quark-park.dyndns.org>,
pointyhat via kris
Fix suggested by: anray
- Add authors to pkg-descr
0.06 Wed Mar 22 12:00:00 2006
- Fixed a circular reference in Audio::Wav::Write::Header that was
causing memory to leak (thanks Sumitro Chowdhury).
- Tidied up bits and pieces.
- Added very basic support for WAVEFORMATEXTENSIBLE.
- When writing files, finish() will now be called by DESTROY if
necessary.
PR: 98172
Submitted by: aaron
Reviewed by: maintainer
Approved by: maintainer, tobez (implicit)
- Update pkg-plist
2.25 15.06.2005
user:pass with proxy support - untested (thanks to Peter)
Please try it, I don't have such a setup.
Cache module: use CDDB_cache instead of CDDB_get
All files are saved in a local tree and can be reused from there.
Please try it if you like, it's not really tested.
2.26 22.06.2005 (unreleased)
added postgres/oracle/sqlite support (untested)
thanks to Rick for starting with a postgres version
2.27 01.01.2006
default port is now 8880 (not 888 anymore)
fixes an ioctl perl problem on current redhat/fedora (thanks to
Gregory K. Ruiz-Ade and the redhat/fedora guys)
PR: 98173
Submitted by: aaron
Reviewed by: maintainer
Approved by: maintainer, tobez (implicit)
x11-toolkits/gtk--2-reference -> x11-toolkits/gtkmm20-reference
Rename this ports to use the real vendor package name. The advantage of this
is to allow our users' keyword search works and easier for users to file the
Bugzilla report when they use our name of ports. Debian, Gentoo, NetBSD and
other OSs have the correct package name, but not in our ports tree.
My team, FreeBSD GNOME Team, have agreed with it.
As for other ports, chase the rename.
PR: ports/97985
Repocopy by: marcus
Rename this ports to use the real vendor package name. The advantage of this
is to allow our users' keyword search works and easier for users to file the
Bugzilla report when they use our name of ports. Debian, Gentoo, NetBSD and
other OSs have the correct package name, but not in our ports tree.
My team, FreeBSD GNOME Team, have agreed with it.
As for other ports, chase the rename.
PR: ports/97985
Repocopy by: marcus
Rename this ports to use the real vendor package name. The advantage of this
is to allow our users' keyword search works and easier for users to file the
Bugzilla report when they use our name of ports. Debian, Gentoo, NetBSD and
other OSs have the correct package name, but not in our ports tree.
My team, FreeBSD GNOME Team, have agreed with it.
As for audio/goobox, audio/rhythmbox, audio/sound-juicer, x11/gnome2,
x11/gnome2-lite and x11-toolkits/py-gnome-desktop chase the rename.
PR: ports/97985
Repocopy by: marcus
Rename this ports to use the real vendor package name. The advantage of this
is to allow our users' keyword search works and easier for users to file the
Bugzilla report when they use our name of ports. Debian, Gentoo, NetBSD and
other OSs have the correct package name, but not in our ports tree.
My team, FreeBSD GNOME Team, have agreed with it.
As for deskutils/timer-applet, x11/gnome2 and x11/gnome2-lite chase the rename.
PR: ports/97985
Repocopy by: marcus
work with pyrex 0.9.4 (which is currently in ports)
- Bumb PORTREVISION to make sure it gets rebuilt
Added file(s):
- files/patch-src_clients_lib_python_xmmsclient.pyx
PR: ports/97675
Submitted by: maintainer
Approved by: tmclaugh (mentor)
Mutagen is an audio metadata tag reader and writer implemented in
pure Python. It supports reading ID3v1.1, ID3v2.2, ID3v2.3, ID3v2.4,
APEv2, and FLAC, and writing ID3v1.1, ID3v2.4, APEv2, and FLAC. It
can also read MPEG audio and Xing headers.
WWW: http://www.sacredchao.net/quodlibet/wiki/Development/Mutagen
PR: ports/97276 [1], ports/96897 [2]
Submitted by: Byung-Hee HWANG <bh@izb.knu.ac.kr> [1]
Peter Johnson <johnson.peter@gmail.com> [2]
Approved by: tmclaugh (mentor)
pure Python. It supports reading ID3v1.1, ID3v2.2, ID3v2.3, ID3v2.4,
APEv2, and FLAC, and writing ID3v1.1, ID3v2.4, APEv2, and FLAC. It
can also read MPEG audio and Xing headers.
WWW: http://www.sacredchao.net/quodlibet/wiki/Development/Mutagen
Submitter of [2] has agreed the port will be maintained by sumbiter of [1]
PR: ports/97276 [1], ports/96897 [2]
Submitted by: Byung-Hee HWANG <bh@izb.knu.ac.kr> [1]
Peter Johnson <johnson.peter@gmail.com> [2]
Approved by: tmtmclaugh (mentor)
application to play multimedia files from Emacs using external
players. Many of it's ideas are derived from MpthreePlayer
(http://www.nongnu.org/mp3player), but it tries to be more general and
more clean.
WWW: http://www.gnu.org/software/emms/index.html
PR: ports/97080
Submitted by: Dryice Liu <dryice@dryice.name>
replay information about problematic files. Some file formats contain too few
information about a song for it to be correctly replayed. To counter this, the
AdPlug database was created.
dependency location instead of explicitly passing modified CPPFLAGS
and LDFLAGS variables. This gives configure script a chance to do the
right thing when detecting libogg if ${LOCALBASE} != "/usr/local"
PR: ports/97464
Submitted by: sergei
Approved by: ahze (maintainer)
Those spaces used to hinder searching for the corresponding files
with portsearch -f '/FILENAME$' for obvious reasons.
Although currently portsearch removes those spaces itself remove
them anyway.
Inspired by: ports/94078
Approved by: portmgr (during freeze: krion, then kris advised to wait; at present: erwin)
plugin is actually a port of the xmms OSS sound ouput plugin to JACK, using
libjackasyn.
WWW: http://gige.xdv.org/libjackasyn/xmms.php
PR: ports/94292
Submitted by: Jose Alonso Cardenas Marquez <acardenas@bsd.org.pe>
sound API with the JACK audio server (jackit.sf.net). libjackasyn is a library
that can be used for two purposes.
First it can be loaded via the LD_PRELOAD variable, turning OSS applications
automatically into JACK-aware applications.
Second, it can be used to link against the program during build time, making it
trivial to turn an OSS aware sound application into a JACK aware sound
application in a short time.
libjackasyn got its name from the asynchronous manner in which it communicates
with the JACK server, which means by using libjackasyn you will introduce an
additional delay exactly the size of one JACK audiobuffer (1024 samples or 44
ms with the JACK default settings). This delay can be reduced by reducing the
JACK buffersize. It should not matter for sound generating applications, but
it might introduce phasing effects when doing sound processing.
WWW: http://gige.xdv.org/libjackasyn/
PR: ports/94290
Submitted by: Jose Alonso Cardenas Marquez <acardenas@bsd.org.pe>
to do so. It is okay to automatically fetch since the distfile is
under a multiple license and specifically gplv2.
PR: 96696 [1]
Submitted by: Alexander Botero-Lowry <alex@foxybanana.com> [1],
Lauri Watts <lauri@kde.org>
for reading and editing the meta-data of several popular audio formats.
Currently it supports both ID3v1 and ID3v2 for MP3 files, Ogg Vorbis comments
and ID3 tags and Vorbis comments in FLAC files.
- Switch to trying to use faad instead of mov123 (non-existant on
UNIX-like platforms) for AAC files [1]
- Switch to using ogg123 directly for OGG vorbis files since sox
doesn't pull in vorbis support by default.
- Add OPTIONS support for various useful audio utils and default to
depending on the less restrictive ones.
PR: ports/91092 [1]
Submitted by: lth [1]
- use fixed plists [1]
- category "linux" added to those ports without it [1]
- update some ports to a recent FC3 one [1]
- remove plists/... for Alpha (there's no support since linux_base-8 for
Alpha anymore)
- don't hardcode version numbers in some plists, use PLIST_SUB instead
(any errors are mine, don't keep them, send them to me)
Regarding linux-ungif I declare a maintainer timeout (one month, Boris tried
to contact the maintainer) and also pull the "sweeping commit"-card (the
port which it uses as some kind of master port can not be used for this
anymore). Besides this, I don't think he will be upset when other people
do the work instead of adding an entry to his TODO list. :-)
This commit brings us just before the switch of the default linux base
port to the fc3 one, modulo some bugs which may appear. So:
Beta testers wanted!
To test:
sed -i.old -e 's:linux-XFree86-libs:linux-xorg-libs:' /usr/ports/Mk/bsd.port.mk
echo OVERRIDE_LINUX_BASE_PORT=fc3 >> /etc/make.conf
portupgrade -f -o emulators/linux_base-fc3 -f linux_base-8
portupgrade -o x11/linux-xorg-libs linux-XFree86-libs
portupgrade linux-\*
The first two steps are necessary to switch to fc3 as the new default linux
base port, the last 3 steps to upgrade to fc3.
And feel free to send a big "Thank you!" to Boris, he did a lot of the work!
I just provided some hints and answered some questions (besides from
committing all the necessary changes for FC3 and doing some minor
changes+comments/improvements to/of his work), even when he tries to tell
you something else. ;-)
Submitted by: Boris Samorodov <bsam@ipt.ru> [1]
- document some variables
- set some variables based upon presets [1]
- automatically guess the src RPM (needs to be overidden for multi-RPM
ports) [1]
- allow to specify complete directories or a set of files for
automatic brandelf handling (BRANDELF_DIRS/BRANDELF_FILES) [1]
- add fc3 to the automatic plist handling [1]
- allow to override the linux-rpm-generate-plist target
- also detect @dirrmtry in the automatic plist handling [1]
- adopt the new-plist target to the new world order [1]
ports: [1,2]
- edit WRKSRC (add rpm/i386/${LINUX_DIST}/${LINUX_DIST_VER})
- add source distfiles to distinfo to allow auto fetching sources
with defined PACKAGE_BUILDING;
- remove some variables already defined at linux-rpm
(i.e. MASTRE_SITE_SUBDIR);
- add LINUX_DIST_VER to every port (in case default linux_base
changes);
- bump PORTREVISION (so that the ports build cluster puts the
src and binary RPM's to the new location)
- update linux-openal to the newest FC3 port
All errors are mine because of cut&paste patch merging.
Aproved by: maintainer [2]
Reviewed on: multimedia [1]
Submitted by: Boris Samorodov <bsam@ipt.ru> [1]
http://www.gnome.org/start/2.14/ for the official release notes, and a list
of all the gooides in this new release. In particular, GNOME 2.14 focused
on performance, and they did not miss the mark. There's some new eye candy,
but most of the big things are waiting until GNOME 2.16. On the FreeBSD
side, we tried to clean up all the crashers we could. In particular, we
really improved GNOME's 64-bit support.
The good news is that this release does not bring any big shared library
version bumps, so you can almost do a simple portupgrade to get to 2.14.
There are a few minor gotchas that will be documented in UPDATING shortly.
The FreeBSD GNOME Team would like th thank the following users for their
patches, feedback, and sometimes incessant complaing about crashes (you
know who you are).
Yasuda Keisuke <kysd@po.harenet.ne.jp>
Pascal Hofstee <caelian@gmail.com>
rmgls@wanadoo.fr
tmclaugh
Yuri Pankov <yuri.pankov@gmail.com>
sajd on #freebsd-gnome
ade
ankon on #FreeBSD-Gnome
mux
Pascal Hofstee <caelian@gmail.com>
QuiRK on #freebsd-gnome
Vladimir Timofeev <vovkasm@gmail.com>