aftp manipulates and browses Apple II disk images. It
supports both Apple DOS 3.3, ProDOS and XGS images.
Both binary floppy images (.IIE) and hard disk volume
(.HDV) images are also supported.
PR: 2816
Submitted by: Joel Sutton <suttonj@interconnect.com.au>
PR: 3610
Submitted by: MOROHOSHI Akihiko <moro@race.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
Use symlink instead of hard link for man pages in compface/Makefile.
Don't compress man pages here in compface/Makefile.
the IBM PC and ar(1) under UNIX. It allows you to perform certain
operations on the same archives used by ShrinkIt, including view
archive contents, add to archive, extract from archive, and delete
from archive. In addi- tion, it will list and unpack files from
Binary II archives.
- build some modules as shared objects, reducing the interpreter's
size and removing the dependency on tix
- install shared objects in lib
- remove version number from OS-dependent script dir
A new port of PyTix will follow shortly.
/usr/bin/perl a while ago. It works with 5.003 and 5.004-tobe.
I can't test it on freefall (I don't have a setuid script to play with)
but it works at home. I'll test on thud later.
Every setuid script found on a partition mounted "nosuid" will not be executed
and "Permission Denied" will be displayed.
It won't be in soo-to-be-released 5.004 because it is not a FreeBSD speciific
problem but it will be dealt with in 5.004_01 (maintenance release).
Obtained from: Jörg's patch (edited for Perl5 by me).
- make patch-ab work again, because of the changes ...
- merge in the CFLAGS from /etc/make.conf
After that the port compiles well and make package is still working ;)
PR:
Reviewed by:
Submitted by:
Obtained from:
hmconv is Korean code conversion utility for especially for E-mail.
It can convert between KS C 5601 and ISO-2022-KR.
Original version is by Jungshik Shin <jshin@minerva.cis.yale.edu>.
PR: 3154
Submitted by: Choi Jun Ho <junker@jazz.snu.ac.kr>
XMake is a make utility. It is not compatible with other makes, but
provides extended functionality over most standard makes. Whereas most
other makes have confusing rulesets and do not support many-to-many
dependancy specifications, XMake has relatively few (basically no) rulesets
and allows you to easily specify many:many dependencies. This gives XMake
the flexibility to deal with complex project hierarchies very simply.
PR: 3137
Submitted by: dlowe@saturn5.com