- update to 0.7.4
- change maintainer to Masanori OZAWA <ozawa@ongs.co.jp> who is
developer of this application
PR: ports/84216
Submitted by: Masanori OZAWA <ozawa@ongs.co.jp>
KchmViewer is a chm (MS HTML help file format) viewer. Unlike most existing
CHM viewers for Unix, it uses Trolltech's Qt widget library, and does not
depend on KDE or Gnome. However, it may be compiled with full KDE support,
including KDE widgets and KIO/KHTML.
The main advantage of KchmViewer is non-english language support. Unlike
others, KchmViewer in most cases correctly detects help file encoding,
correctly shows tables of context of russian, korean, chinese and japanese
help files, and correctly searches in non-english help files.
WWW: http://kchmviewer.sourceforge.net/
* Tomboy/panelapplet/AppletFactory.cs: Subclass from GLib.Object.
Needed to work around what I can only guess is a mono 1.0.x and
1.1.x incompatibility, whereby calling protected
GLib.Object.LookupGType externally is no longer allowed.
Hopefully fixes bug #306815.
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=306815
Reported by: Geraud CONTINSOUZAS <gej at jmenbra.nl>
Took from: tomboy CVS.
BSD# - Project by: http://www.mono-project.com/Mono:FreeBSD
- Bump PORTREVISION
Changes:
- Updated buildsystem (where a new bug slipped in, therefore the new patch)
- bugfix in src/fs/filesystem.cpp
- two new sanity checks in src/library/ktagebuch.cpp
Submitted by: pointyhat via kris
entries.
The KlipOQuery panel applet for KDE is meant to be a bridge between klipper
and the web. By simply copying the active item from the clipboard, KlipOQuery
will pass this string to the selected service from the popupmenu.
Features:
- Get infos from selected words of all applications with one click
- Group services in your own categories
- Change selected services with the scrollwheel
- Have a fast access to your top services
WWW: http://www.michael-vonrueden.de/klipoquery/
Doodle is a tool to quickly search the documents on a computer. Doodle
builds an index using meta-data contained in the documents and allows
fast searches on the resulting database. Doodle uses libextractor to
support obtaining meta-data from various file-formats. The database
used by doodle is a suffix tree, resulting in fast lookups. Doodle
supports approximate searches.
WWW: http://gnunet.org/doodle/
Submitted by: Tom McLaughlin <tmclaugh@sdf.lonestar.org>, myself
* Fixed a bug that caused RSS output to crash if the file already existed,
but had no items.
* Added and fixed several comics
PR: 82439
Submitted by: Antoine Brodin <antoine.brodin@laposte.net>
- USE_LINUX now implies NO_FILTER_SHLIBS=yes. It also doesn't use FreeBSD
tools to strip binaries anymore, so it's not neccesary anymore to override
STRIP and STRIP_CMD.
- USE_LINUX_PREFIX implies NO_MTREE now.
- In the USE_LINUX case, USE_XLIB now depends upon the linux X11 libraries
instead upon the native FreeBSD libraries.
- The variable LINUX_BASE_PORT contains a string which is suitable as an
item in *_DEPENDS, so if a port BATCH_DEPENDS or FETCH_DEPENDS upon the
default (or overriden) linux base, ${LINUX_BASE_PORT} should be used
instead of a hardcoded reference.
- Change all ports to comply to the "new world order".
- The Ports Collection now allows to override the default linux_base port.
Specify e.g. OVERRIDE_LINUX_BASE_PORT=rh-9 in /etc/make.conf to use
${PORTSDIR}/emulators/linux_base-rh-9 (the logic is to use
${PORTSDIR}/emulators/linux_base-${OVERRIDE_LINUX_BASE_PORT}).
- If USE_LINUX or OVERRIDE_LINUX_BASE doesn't point to an existing linux_base
port and if USE_LINUX isn't set to "yes" (case insensitive), the port will
be marked as IGNORE. [1]
- Readd USE_LINUX knobs into several ports and make several uses of a
conditional dependency ("USE_LINUX?=") into an unconditional one
("USE_LINUX=") which where removed/changed by Trevor to allow the use of
alternative linux_base ports. While this is a nice goal, the implementation
resulted in missing dependencies. The OVERRIDE_LINUX_BASE_PORT knob
in this commit is supposed to fix the problem while keeping the feature.
Basicaly this includes a backout of Trevor's commit, to prevent confusion
I mention it here explicitely.
- Use the correct prefix (X11- instead of LOCAL- or LINUX-) for some ports.
Chase dependencies for this.
- Changes to make linux_devtools installable on amd64, remove some stray
device nodes (they don't work on recent OS versions and aren't really
needed).
- Make linux_base-8 PREFIX clean and remove some stray device nodes.
Additionally tell a little bit more about how to setup NIS/YP [2].
- Update the PGSQL dependency in the linux-opengroupware port to a recent
version (the old one isn't available anymore), I don't know if this
works (at least it isn't more broken than before).
- Use PREFIX/usr/share/doc instead of PREFIX/usr/doc in the divx4linux
ports, the former path exists already and gets populated by other
packages too (PREFIX=LINUXPREFIX!).
- Fix some obvious (non-linuxolator) bugs in some linux ports while being
there.
- Bump PORTREVISION where neccesary.
Requested by: portmgr (linimon) [1]
Submittted by: Gerrit Kuehn <gerrit_huehn@gruft.fido.de [2]
Approved by: portmgr (kris, linimon), maintainers (or maintainer timeout)
Tested on: ports cluster (kris)
Reviewed by: silence on emulation@
Superseedes PR: 69997
Maintainer approval from:
chris@chrisburkert.decracauer@cons.org
des
girgen
jamie@bishopston.net
mezz
mi
nivit@users.sf.net
pat
simond@irrelevant.orgriggs@rrr.deUdo.Schweigert@Siemens.com
What has changed:
* Support for LiveJournal, Blogger, MovableType, Advogato, and Atom journals
(systems based off these are also supported, including WordPress and Drupal)
* The ability to post, edit, delete, and view recent entries
* Integrated spellchecking and HTML syntax highlighting
* Offline composition and editing
* Automatic recovery in the event of a crash
* Journal system extensions, including LiveJournal security groups and
MovableType categories
consumer of the updated acpi_ibm(4) driver:
With TPB it is possible to bind a program to the ThinkPad, Mail, Home and
Search button. TPB can also run a callback program on each state change with
the changed state and the new state as options. So it is possible to trigger
several actions on different events.
TPB has an on-screen display (OSD) to show volume, mute, brightness and some
other information. Furthermore TPB supports a software mixer, as the R series
ThinkPads have no hardware mixer to change the volume.
WWW: http://www.nongnu.org/tpb/
- Remove the ${BUILD_DEPENDS} in RUN_DEPENDS, because it causes gmake, libtool
and few others become as runtime dependency, which they are just need to be
in the build dependency.
- Fix the dbus by chase dbus's change in Oct 2004 for from
lib/dbus-1.0/services to share/dbus-1/services. It should fix the plist. [2]
- Bump the PORTREVISION.
Reported by: pointyhat via kris [2]
Submitted by: sajd via IRC (#freebsd-gnome) [1]
Discussed with: marcus and tmclaugh via IRC (#freebsd-gnome) [2]
-Add a missing MAN1.
-Bump the PORTREVISION.
BTW: dbus stuff is kind of bother me. I am not sure if it does right, but I
will ask marcus and tmclaugh about it. (ie: lib/dbus-1.0/services)
Reported by: pointyhat via kris [1]
Pointy hat to: tmclaugh
o Entries for 0.36 added to the Changelog
o Regeneration of autogenerated documentation. Therefore minor changes in
examples/python_api.html
doc/python_api/python_api.html
o Updated version string in src/main.cpp
- Add additional touch(1) to fix the buildsystem of the new tarball
Submitted by: Adam Stroud <adam.stroud@gmail.com>
pointyhat via kris
and easy to use, but with potential to help you organize the ideas and
information you deal with every day.
The key to Tomboy's usefulness lies in the ability to relate notes and
ideas together. Using a WikiWiki-like linking system, organizing ideas
is as simple as typing a name. Branching an idea off is easy as pressing
the Link button. And links between your ideas won't break, even when
renaming and reorganizing them.
WWW: http://www.beatniksoftware.com/tomboy/
BSD# - Project by: http://www.mono-project.com/Mono:FreeBSD
one, and it has a nice metakit db backend.
Gourmet allows you to collect, search and organize your
recipes, and to automatically generate shopping lists from
your collection.
Gourmet's features include:
* Simple searching and sorting
* Easy recipe editing
* Import and export from various formats
* A shopping list creator and organizer
WWW: http://grecipe-manager.sourceforge.net/
Provides a small beep-media-player icon in the system tray
(should work with GNOME, KDE, fluxbox, etc.) that provides
basic play control for beep-media-player. Also displays the
current song title in a tooltip.
WWW: http://mark.xnull.de/bmp-docklet.php
implements the fd.o menu spec but may or may not work with other DEs.
WWW: http://www.realistanew.com/2005/03/18/gnome-menu-editor/
--
py-xdg/menueditor don't understand KDE menu correct in gnome-menus, LegacyDirs
and etc. I won't be surpised if py-xdg developers are working on it to get
better.
The release notes can be found at
http://www.gnome.org/start/2.10/notes/rnwhatsnew.html, and will give you a
good idea of what has gone into this release overall. However, a lot of
FreeBSD specific additions and fixes have been made. For example, this
release offers fixed ACPI support as well as new CPU freqeuncy monitoring
support. See the FreeBSD GNOME 2.10 upgrade page at
http://www.FreeBSD.org/gnome/docs/faq210.html for the entire list as well
as a list of known issues and upgrade instructions.
GNOME 2.10, as well as all of our releases, would not be possible without
the great team that goes into porting and testign each and every component.
Thanks definitely goes out to ahze, adamw, bland, kwm, mezz, and pav for all
their work. We would also like to thank our adventurous users that chose to
ride the walrus. We'd especially like to thank the following users that
provided patches for GNOME 2.10:
ade
Yasuda Keisuke
Franz Klammer
Khairil Yusof
Radek Kozlowsk
And anyone else I may have accidentally omitted.
As with GNOME 2.8, 2.10 comes with a brand-spankin' new splashscreen
courtesy of Franz Klammer. However, unlike GNOME 2.8, we've included all
of the FreeBSD GNOME splashscreen entries with gnomesession. You can
use the deskutils/splashsetter port to choose the one you like best.
As always, GNOME users should _not_ use portupgrade alone to upgrade to
2.10. Instead, get the gnome_upgrade.sh script from
http://www.FreeBSD.org/gnome/gnome_upgrade.sh.
Enjoy!
the data. It's a good company of planner.el. You can use Remember.el to add
note to planner.el "on the fly".
PR: ports/78617
Submitted by: Dryice Liu <dryice@liu.com.cn>
your pending and completed tasks, daily schedule, dates to remember, notes and
inspirations. It is a powerful tool not only for managing your time and
productivity, but also for keeping within easy keystroke reach all of the
information you need to be productive. It can even publish reports charting
your work for your personal web page, your conscience, or your
soon-to-be-impressed boss.
PR: ports/78615
Submitted by: Dryice Liu <dryice@liu.com.cn>
The referenced distfile is not the original one. Missing configure checks for
fam and dnotify were added as well as proper PTHREAD_LIBS detection and a
gcc 2.95.4 compile fix.
only a development version avaiable on the new site, replace the MASTERSITE
until the upcomming 0.5.0 version is considered stable
- Let WWW point to the new projectsite
Submitted by: pointyhat via kris
This release adds sort options for the calendar dropdown.
It adds a new template for events in list mode. It fixes a
bug that caused events to sometimes not appear and a bug
with email reminders.