Note that these directories are be removed by other dependency ports,
so I do not bump PORTREVISION for them. These affected ports are
belong to ports@.
PR: ports/101586
Submitted by: Stanislav Sedov <ssedov at mbsd.msk.ru>
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.
installed libraries are now named libitcl.so.3 & libitk.so.3 instead
of having the version be part of the libname (libitcl33.so.1). The
itclConfig.sh and itkConfig.sh are now also installed, which is required
by some software (such as the insight -- a gdb frontend).
Fix-up the (unchanged) iwidgets port to reflect the above and improve it
to not require its own copy of the itcl tree at install time.
Approved by: maintainer
Fix-up the tkdesk port to reflect the itcl/itk changes, which required
updating it to the 2.0p2 (from 2.0). (This lovely piece of software
badly needs a caring maintainer, BTW.) While here, teach tkdesk to use
installed blt instead of building its own.
The only iwidget/itk/itcl consumer that remains broken is net/smm++ (a
MUD client). This should change as soon as the maintainer get back to
me.
- See http://emelfm2.net/ChangeLog for a detailled list of changes.
- Satisfy portlint.
- Remove PLUGINDIR and PLUGINS variables leftover from after the 0.1.2 update
PR: ports/96972
Submitted by: Marcus von Appen <mva@sysfault.org>
Approved by: tmclaugh (mentor)
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>
Unix, written in C++. It is aimed at nonsense-free file management. It
is mostly inspired by the List View in Mac OS Finder, but also has
Unix-handy features such as an interactive location bar with Bash-style
tab completion, and a simple but elegant user interface.
WWW: http://jaffm.binary.is/
PR: ports/96427
Submitted by: Shaun Amott <shaun@inerd.com>
- Don't explicitly mention a specific supported KDE version in pkg-descr
- Fix typo and add a trailing newline for better readability in pkg-message
PR: ports/93919
Submitted by: Rainer Alves <rainer.alves@gmail.com>
Approved by: maintainer
PR.
Thanks for contributing.
Since the acroread7 port is a somewhat important port for our users, I
will hand it over to emulation@ if no _active_ *committer* takes it
before the ports freeze.
While I'm here:
- fix a little nit in the csound port (I think the intention was to
create no backup file instead of creating one with a "-e" extension)
- set ARCH to i386 in the amd64 case for the acroread7 port. This
is a work-around to be able to install everything when a dependency
is not already installed (ARCH is read-only in sub-makes, so the
dependencies can't change it). This should be removed when the
dependencies are fixed or converted to use bsd.linux-rpm.mk. [1]
Not objected to by: portmgr (explicit: krion; silence: rest)
Maintainer timeout: ~4 months
Submitted by: Sangwoo Shim <sangwoos@gmail.com> [1]
PR: 87985 [1]