with very safe integrity checking and a user interface similar
to the one of gzip or bzip2.
WWW: http://www.nongnu.org/lzip/lzip.html
Sylvio Cesar <scjamorim@bsd.com.br>
PR: 135889
Submitted by: Sylvio Cesar <scjamorim@bsd.com.br>
Those ports are intended to be used with 8-CURRENT at least
with SVN r192206.
If you want to switch to linux-f10 ports, please define at /etc/make.conf:
OVERRIDE_LINUX_BASE_PORT=f10
OVERRIDE_LINUX_NONBASE_PORTS=f10
An upgrading procedure is shown at /usr/ports/UPDATING, entries 20090401
and 20070327.
For the first time all tested linux ports work as expected(!):
. acroread8;
. google-earth;
. skype;
. seamonkey.
Many thanks for kernel folks who really did the main work
(and I wrote only some lines of ports).
There is a good chance that those ports may become a default
for 8.0-RELEASE. Please, test and report back to emulation@ ML.
The recommended version of FreeBSD to use them is 8-CURRENT.
FreeBSD-7.x is not fully compatible with compat.linux.osrelease
2.6.16. Some syscalls cannot be MFCed due to native FreeBSD
ABI breakage.
Usage (and package building):
1. define compat.linux.osrelease=2.6.16;
2. add following variables to /etc/make.conf:
. OVERRIDE_LINUX_BASE_PORT=f8;
. OVERRIDE_LINUX_NONBASE_PORTS=f8.
Approved by: bsam (me) ;-)
library which typically compresses better (i.e., smaller resulting files) than
gzip.
Using CamlBZ2 you can read and write compressed "files", where files can be
anything offering an in_channel/out_channel abstraction (files, sockets, ...).
Also, with CamlBZ2 you can compress and decompress strings in memory using the
bzip2 compression algorithm.
Author: Olivier Andreu <oandrieu@gmail.com> and
Stefano Zacchiroli <zack@upsilon.cc>
WWW: http://camlbz2.forge.ocamlcore.org
PR: ports/132059
Submitted by: Jaap Boender <jaapb at kerguelen.org>
PylibLZMA provides a python interface for the liblzma
library to read and write data that has been compressed
or can be decompressed by Lasse Collin's LZMA Utils.
WWW: http://launchpad.net/pyliblzma
PR: ports/129560
Submitted by: David Naylor <dragonsa at highveldmail.co.za>
streams of data represented as lazy ByteStrings. It uses the zlib C
library so it has high performance. It supports the "zlib", "gzip" and
"raw" compression formats. It provides a convenient high level api suitable
for most tasks and for the few cases where more control is needed it provides
access to the full zlib feature set.
PR: ports/128552
Submitted by: Samy Al Bahra <sbahra@kerneled.org>
adds archive operations to the file context menus. Using this plugin you
will be able to extract and create archive files from within Thunar using
a single click.
WWW: http://foo-projects.org/~benny/projects/thunar-archive-plugin/
PR: ports/125998
Submitted by: ports at c0decafe.net <ports at c0decafe.net>
Libpar2 is a library for creating and using PAR2 files to detect
damage in data files and repair them if necessary. It can be used with
any kind of file. Par files are especially popular on Usenet.
Libpar2 is extracted from par2cmdline, and distributed separately.
WWW: http://parchive.sourceforge.net/
PR: ports/126578
Submitted by: Jeff Burchell <toxic@doobie.com>
New major version of RPM, based upon rpm5.org release.
Major new features are sqlite, xar and lzma support as
well as lots of cleanup and better support for FreeBSD.
See http://rpm5.org/pressrelease.php for more details.
The new rpm5 port is based on the old rpm4 port, with
new knobs added for Python and Lua scripting support.
PR: ports/123022
Submitted by: Anders F Björklund <afb@rpm5.org>
PHP libraries or applications, similar to Java jar files.
WWW: http://pear.php.net/package/PHP_Archive/
PR: ports/123832
Submitted by: Wen Heping <wenheping at gmail.com>
LZMA Utils is an attempt to provide LZMA compression to POSIX-like
systems. The idea is to have a gzip-like command line tool and
zlib-like library, which would make it easy to adapt the new
compression technology to existing applications.
WWW: http://tukaani.org/lzma/
tbb version of the par2cmdline tool.
par2cmdline is a program for creating and using PAR2 files to detect
damage in data files and repair them if necessary. It can be used with
any kind of file. Par files are especially popular on Usenet.
WWW: http://chuchusoft.com/par2_tbb/
PR: ports/120462
Submitted by: Ganael Laplanche <ganael.laplanche at martymac.com>
provides the ability to deal with POSIX tar(1) archive files. The
implementation is based heavily on Mauricio Fernández's implementation
in rpa-base, but has been reorganised to promote reuse in other projects.
The library can only handle files and directories at this point.
The command line utility, minitar, can only create archives, extract from
archives, and list archive contents.
WWW: http://rubyforge.org/projects/ruwiki/
All common archive types are supported. RPM and ISO are handled without
rpm or isodump executables.
PR: 122149
Submitted by: Andreev Maxim <andreevmaxim@gmail.com>
Approved by: miwi (mentor)
as a PHP-oriented equivalent of the Java jar format. As jar, PHK allows to
distribute and run a library or an application as a single file.
The PHK accelerator transparently makes PHK runtime faster.
WWW: http://pecl.php.net/package/phk/
PR: ports/119828
Submitted by: Ditesh Shashikant Gathani <ditesh at gathani.org>
This package allows you to create, and extract tar archives.
Since the package uses InputStream and OutputStream, it is possible
to combine this package with the java.util.zip package to handle
.tar.gz files.
WWW: http://www.trustice.com/java/tar/
Linux version of par2cmdline. Useful when the native version
does not work correctly (e.g. when you get a "Main packet
not found" error).
PR: ports/112124
Submitted by: Ganael LAPLANCHE <ganael.laplanche@martymac.com>
Simple command line implementation of PPMD compression algorithm. It
is based on code by Dmitry Shkarin (archivers/ppmd) but reworked by
Igor Pavlov and bundled with 7zip.
WWW: http://www.7-zip.org/sdk.html