to several of the existing ones.
Add a knob to install the ping program setuid so it can ping your network.
Remove some now-redundant patching.
Regenerate a couple of patches.
* Two new hacks (little screen saver programs), and improvements to
many others.
* Remove the libwarning, since hopefully by now everyone has upgraded
their pkgconfig ports by now.
* Undo some more unauthorized changes.
already has xscreensaver-gnome to work with, and I think they'll
do a great job with it. This is not a rash decision. I've discussed
the issue several times with the gnome team, and suffice it to say
that we have different ideas about how things should look. I've also
sent an e-mail directly to them describing the reasoning for my
decision in more detail.
Since I'm here, make not wanting Kerberos explicit. Several users
who've had various bits and pieces of Kerberos left behind after
trying to remove it have reported that the configure script is
a little overzealous about finding those bits, and we end up
with either a failed build, or a less than completely successful
binary. If this becomes a problem we can revisit it.
and xscreensaver-gnome, so that GNOME components now is fully independent
from the main xscreensaver port. Unfortunately all numerous attempts of
GNOME team to put xscreensaver's maintainer into a co-operative mode
failed, so that this commit goes in unreviewed. In addition, prevent
xscreensaver from detecting gtk/glib/libxml-2.0 when it is not asked
for, remove stale warning, use USE_GNOMENG and detect/use libintl
properly. This expected to significantly decrease number of "xscreensaver
doesn't work with GNOME" complains in freebsd-gnome mailing list.
Approved by: maintainer's timeout
tell configure that you want something other than zippy for fortunes.
* Change the method of displaying the warning message to one that is
friendlier to displaying multi-line instructions.
* Conditionally include webcollage-helper in the PLIST depending on
whether it was built by xscreensaver or not (which in turn depends
on the existence of gdk-pixbuf).
Changes to the software:
* Several new little screensavers (hacks)
* Updates to many others
* Better GTK/Gnome 2 support
* New man pages for things that didn't have them
Changes to the port:
* Removed ill-advised, unapproved, and inappropriate changes
from previous commits. Things like webcollage-helper are created
dynamically by configure, and will be accounted for at some point
in the future. Meanwhile, having one extra item for a few people
is better than one two few for others.
* One more port goes over to the GMAKE darkside
* Since there are so many new man pages, re-sort them all
* Updated pkg-plist for the new stuff
* One of my patches was included in the distribution, so
shorten patch-ab
* Take advantage of the fact that I have to regenerate the
other patch anyway, and fix the name of the patch file
* Fixes perl incompatibility problem with RELENG_4
* Fixes some memory leaks
* Adds two new hacks, and two new BSOD's
* Improves some existing hacks/features
assortment of bugs fixed. The author has incorporated several of
our patches, so I can reduce or eliminate them. However, I had
to add one small patch to get -lcompat into one of the new
screensavers.
In addition to the upgrade, I'm also reverting most of the recent
gnome changes in favor of forcing the xml files into one location
regardless of gnome/not gnome. I think long term this will be
a better strategy.
1. Redesigned -demo GUI (nice, except see below).
2. New modes of operation; one saver, blank/don't blank.
3. New hacks (screen saver modules).
4. Improved or fixed several other hacks.
5. Improved xinerama compatibility.
See http://www.jwz.org/xscreensaver/changelog.html for details.
* Sadly, the new GUI relies on xml, so that's now a dependency.
* I moved the various hack files and their xml config files into
their own directories.
* Fixed the poorly done hack in the Makefile to s/malloc.h/stdlib.h/
* Removed a patch hunk that's no longer needed.
* Added a fix for the new configure script's failure to recognize the
option to put the xml files in their own directories. (Already contacted author)
* Correct something I didn't catch when I took over the port... if we want
the -demo program to handle settings, GTK isn't optional.
* Add a patch that handles an overly enthusiastic attempt to avoid bzero
(which one of the hacks actually uses).