FreeBSD ports you maintain which are out of date

2015-02-10 Thread portscout
Dear port maintainer,

The portscout new distfile checker has detected that one or more of your
ports appears to be out of date. Please take the opportunity to check
each of the ports listed below, and if possible and appropriate,
submit/commit an update. If any ports have already been updated, you can
safely ignore the entry.

You will not be e-mailed again for any of the port/version combinations
below.

Full details can be found at the following URL:
http://portscout.freebsd.org/po...@freebsd.org.html


Port| Current version | New version
+-+
net/pear-Auth_RADIUS| 1.0.7   | 1.1.0
+-+
textproc/groonga| 4.0.6.1 | 5.0.0
+-+


If any of the above results are invalid, please check the following page
for details on how to improve portscout's detection and selection of
distfiles on a per-port basis:

http://portscout.freebsd.org/info/portscout-portconfig.txt

Thanks.
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Curso de Direito Constitucional 19ª Edição

2015-02-10 Thread Verbatim
Voce esta vendo uma versao simplificada desta mensagem.
Para visualizar a versao completa acesse o endereco abaixo:
http://verbatimeditora.mailee.me/go/index/714953871?key=f9849c

a:hover {
color: #2795b6 !important;
}
a:active {
color: #2795b6 !important;
}
a:visited {
color: #2ba6cb !important;
}
h1 a:active {
color: #2ba6cb !important;
}
h2 a:active {
color: #2ba6cb !important;
}
h3 a:active {
color: #2ba6cb !important;
}
h4 a:active {
color: #2ba6cb !important;
}
h5 a:active {
color: #2ba6cb !important;
}
h6 a:active {
color: #2ba6cb !important;
}
h1 a:visited {
color: #2ba6cb !important;
}
h2 a:visited {
color: #2ba6cb !important;
}
h3 a:visited {
color: #2ba6cb !important;
}
h4 a:visited {
color: #2ba6cb !important;
}
h5 a:visited {
color: #2ba6cb !important;
}
h6 a:visited {
color: #2ba6cb !important;
}
table.button:hover td {
background: #2795b6 !important;
}
table.button:visited td {
background: #2795b6 !important;
}
table.button:active td {
background: #2795b6 !important;
}
table.button:hover td a {
color: #fff !important;
}
table.button:visited td a {
color: #fff !important;
}
table.button:active td a {
color: #fff !important;
}
table.button:hover td {
background: #2795b6 !important;
}
table.tiny-button:hover td {
background: #2795b6 !important;
}
table.small-button:hover td {
background: #2795b6 !important;
}
table.medium-button:hover td {
background: #2795b6 !important;
}
table.large-button:hover td {
background: #2795b6 !important;
}
table.button:hover td a {
color: #ff !important;
}
table.button:active td a {
color: #ff !important;
}
table.button td a:visited {
color: #ff !important;
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table.tiny-button:hover td a {
color: #ff !important;
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table.tiny-button:active td a {
color: #ff !important;
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table.tiny-button td a:visited {
color: #ff !important;
}
table.small-button:hover td a {
color: #ff !important;
}
table.small-button:active td a {
color: #ff !important;
}
table.small-button td a:visited {
color: #ff !important;
}
table.medium-button:hover td a {
color: #ff !important;
}
table.medium-button:active td a {
color: #ff !important;
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table.medium-button td a:visited {
color: #ff !important;
}
table.large-button:hover td a {
color: #ff !important;
}
table.large-button:active td a {
color: #ff !important;
}
table.large-button td a:visited {
color: #ff !important;
}
table.secondary:hover td {
background: #d0d0d0 !important; color: #555;
}
table.secondary:hover td a {
color: #555 !important;
}
table.secondary td a:visited {
color: #555 !important;
}
table.secondary:active td a {
color: #555 !important;
}
table.success:hover td {
background: #457a1a !important;
}
table.alert:hover td {
background: #970b0e !important;
}
table.facebook:hover td {
background: #2d4473 !important;
}
table.twitter:hover td {
background: #0087bb !important;
}
table.google-plus:hover td {
background: #CC !important;
}
.header a:hover {
color: #000 !important;
}
@media only screen and (max-width: 600px) {
table[class="body"] img {
width: auto !important; height: auto !important;
}
table[class="body"] center {
min-width: 0 !important;
}
table[class="body"] .container {
width: 95% !important;
}
table[class="body"] .row {
width: 100% !important; display: block !important;
}
table[class="body"] .wrapper {
display: block !important; padding-right: 0 !important;
}
table[class="body"] .columns {
table-layout: fixed !important; float: none !important; width: 100% !important; 
padding-right: 0px !important; padding-left: 0px !important; display: block 
!important;
}
table[class="body"] .column {
table-layout: fixed !important; float: none !important; width: 100% !important; 
padding-right: 0px !important; padding-left: 0px !important; display: block 
!important;
}
table[class="body"] .wrapper.first .columns {
display: table !important;
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table[class="body"] .wrapper.first .column {
display: table !important;
}
table[class="body"] table.columns td {
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table[class="body"] table.column td {
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table[class="body"] td.offset-by-one {
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}
table[class="body"] td.offset-by-two {
padding-left: 0 !important;
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table[class="body"] td.offset-by-three {
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table[class="body"] td.offset-by-four {
padding-left: 0 !important;
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table[class="body"] td.offset-by-five {
padding-left: 0 !important;
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table[class="body"] td.offset-by-six {
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table[class="body"] td.offset-by-seven {
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table[class="body"] td.offset-by-eight {
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table[class="body"] td.offset-by-nine {
padding-left: 0 !important;
}
table[class="body"] td.offset-by-ten {
padding-left: 0 !important;
}
table[class="body"] td.offset-by-eleven {
padding-left: 0 !important;
}
table[class="body"] .expander {
width: px !important;
}
table[class="body"] .right-text-pad {
padding-left: 10px !important;
}
table[class="body"] .text-pad-right {
padd

introducing myself + 3 new ports www/h2o net-mgmt/riemann net-p2p/swift

2015-02-10 Thread Dave Cottlehuber
Hi BSDers

By way of introduction,  I've been quietly running FreeBSD on my server
a couple of
years now, and am hoping any day for being able to run it on my laptop
too.

I'm primarily an Erlang/OTP developer, incl committer for Apache
CouchDB, mainly working
on http://www.swirl-project.org/ a not-yet-working Erlang implementation
of the PPSP protocol[6].

I've done 3 ports recently and would love some further input on what I
missed / could fix.

Riemann: Java/Clojure-based event & monitoring system
[1]: http://riemann.io/
[2]: https://bugs.freebsd.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=197403

h2o: HTTP/2 server implementation in C
the project kindly made some changes to close down cleanly on FreeBSD
[3]: https://github.com/h2o/h2o
[4]: https://bugs.freebsd.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=197519

swift: a LPGL C++ based implementation of the PPSP protocol
[5]: http://libswift.org/
[6]: http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-ppsp-peer-protocol
No port submission for this as I'm waiting on upstream to commit some
build fixes and tag the repo.

All code is up at https://github.com/skunkwerks/freebsd-ports.

Thank bapt@, xmj@ who have helped me out on IRC with poudriere and
porting tips & questions.

—
  Dave Cottlehuber
  Sent from my Couch


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portsnap fetch fails

2015-02-10 Thread Alfred Bartsch
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

Hi,
after installing FreeBSD 10.1 from downloaded DVD image, I wanted to
update my local portstree, but ...

Today, running "portsnap fetch" fails unexpectedly.

Looking up portsnap.FreeBSD.org mirrors... 7 mirrors found.
Fetching public key from ec2-eu-west-1.portsnap.freebsd.org... done.
Fetching snapshot tag from ec2-eu-west-1.portsnap.freebsd.org... done.
Fetching snapshot metadata... done.
Fetching snapshot generated at Tue Feb 10 01:01:06 CET 2015:
9528fd262c49a418579faa6f58bfc3c4040fe96c58d92d100% of   56 MB  153
kBps 00m00s
Extracting snapshot...
snap/8bd2f2d1e85bb98a760022703eac8ff47d51700559cfedcb0b158e4eca2fc992.gz:
(Empty error message)
tar: Error exit delayed from previous errors.
#

Retrying this command leads to another error message:

#portsnap fetch
Looking up portsnap.FreeBSD.org mirrors... 7 mirrors found.
Fetching snapshot tag from ec2-eu-west-1.portsnap.freebsd.org... done.
Fetching snapshot metadata... done.
Fetching snapshot generated at Tue Feb 10 01:01:06 CET 2015:
fetch:
http://ec2-eu-west-1.portsnap.freebsd.org/s/9528fd262c49a418579faa6f58bfc3c4040fe96c58d92dde47e79adc8d734b8b.tgz:
Requested Range Not Satisfiable
#

I have to remove all contents from /var/db/portsnap to be able to
repeat "portsnap fetch", as this command seems to lack a "--force" option.

uname -a:
FreeBSD pcadmin2.incore 10.1-RELEASE FreeBSD 10.1-RELEASE #0 r274401:
Tue Nov 11 21:02:49 UTC 2014
r...@releng1.nyi.freebsd.org:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/GENERIC  amd64
- -- 
Sincerely
Alfred Bartsch
Data-Service GmbH
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Version: GnuPG v1.4.11 (FreeBSD)
Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://enigmail.mozdev.org/

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databases/sqlite3: update port to 3.8.8.2

2015-02-10 Thread Robert Simmons
The port maintainer has approved my update patch. Is there a
committer available to look this over and commit?

https://bugs.freebsd.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=197285
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how to make a port of ex-FreeBSD code...

2015-02-10 Thread John-Mark Gurney
Hello,

I'm going to be removing bdes (and possibly enigma) from FreeBSD and
making a port of it...

What is the best way to do this?

Should I fetch this from git/svn?  Make a new archive of this?  But if
I create a new archive, how to distribut it (keeping it in my home dir
is not an option, as I don't plan on maintaining it)?

Is there an example of other code that was retired to the ports tree?

Thanks.

-- 
  John-Mark Gurney  Voice: +1 415 225 5579

 "All that I will do, has been done, All that I have, has not."
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Re: how to make a port of ex-FreeBSD code...

2015-02-10 Thread Chris H
On Tue, 10 Feb 2015 14:21:28 -0800 John-Mark Gurney  wrote

> Hello,
> 
> I'm going to be removing bdes (and possibly enigma) from FreeBSD and
> making a port of it...
> 
> What is the best way to do this?
> 
> Should I fetch this from git/svn?  Make a new archive of this?  But if
> I create a new archive, how to distribut it (keeping it in my home dir
> is not an option, as I don't plan on maintaining it)?
> 
> Is there an example of other code that was retired to the ports tree?
The only example that I can think of was fortune(6); specifically;
the "naughty" fortunes that were censored. Last I heard, someone
indicated they had ported it into ports tree.

HTH

--Chris
> 
> Thanks.
> 
> -- 
>   John-Mark GurneyVoice: +1 415 225 5579
> 
>  "All that I will do, has been done, All that I have, has not."
> ___
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Re: how to make a port of ex-FreeBSD code...

2015-02-10 Thread John-Mark Gurney
Chris H wrote this message on Tue, Feb 10, 2015 at 15:08 -0800:
> On Tue, 10 Feb 2015 14:21:28 -0800 John-Mark Gurney  wrote
> 
> > Hello,
> > 
> > I'm going to be removing bdes (and possibly enigma) from FreeBSD and
> > making a port of it...
> > 
> > What is the best way to do this?
> > 
> > Should I fetch this from git/svn?  Make a new archive of this?  But if
> > I create a new archive, how to distribut it (keeping it in my home dir
> > is not an option, as I don't plan on maintaining it)?
> > 
> > Is there an example of other code that was retired to the ports tree?
> The only example that I can think of was fortune(6); specifically;
> the "naughty" fortunes that were censored. Last I heard, someone
> indicated they had ported it into ports tree.

A port was made, but it was nevery committed (or if it was, I sure
can't find it), so that isn't a good example..

-- 
  John-Mark Gurney  Voice: +1 415 225 5579

 "All that I will do, has been done, All that I have, has not."
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Re: how to make a port of ex-FreeBSD code...

2015-02-10 Thread Baptiste Daroussin
On Tue, Feb 10, 2015 at 03:31:54PM -0800, John-Mark Gurney wrote:
> Chris H wrote this message on Tue, Feb 10, 2015 at 15:08 -0800:
> > On Tue, 10 Feb 2015 14:21:28 -0800 John-Mark Gurney  
> > wrote
> > 
> > > Hello,
> > > 
> > > I'm going to be removing bdes (and possibly enigma) from FreeBSD and
> > > making a port of it...
> > > 
> > > What is the best way to do this?
> > > 
> > > Should I fetch this from git/svn?  Make a new archive of this?  But if
> > > I create a new archive, how to distribut it (keeping it in my home dir
> > > is not an option, as I don't plan on maintaining it)?
> > > 
> > > Is there an example of other code that was retired to the ports tree?
> > The only example that I can think of was fortune(6); specifically;
> > the "naughty" fortunes that were censored. Last I heard, someone
> > indicated they had ported it into ports tree.
> 
> A port was made, but it was nevery committed (or if it was, I sure
> can't find it), so that isn't a good example..
> 
Have a look at devel/fmake

Bapt


pgp4YdPb4SZsO.pgp
Description: PGP signature


Re: how to make a port of ex-FreeBSD code...

2015-02-10 Thread Chris H
On Tue, 10 Feb 2015 15:31:54 -0800 John-Mark Gurney  wrote

> Chris H wrote this message on Tue, Feb 10, 2015 at 15:08 -0800:
> > On Tue, 10 Feb 2015 14:21:28 -0800 John-Mark Gurney 
> > wrote 
> > > Hello,
> > > 
> > > I'm going to be removing bdes (and possibly enigma) from FreeBSD and
> > > making a port of it...
> > > 
> > > What is the best way to do this?
> > > 
> > > Should I fetch this from git/svn?  Make a new archive of this?  But if
> > > I create a new archive, how to distribut it (keeping it in my home dir
> > > is not an option, as I don't plan on maintaining it)?
> > > 
> > > Is there an example of other code that was retired to the ports tree?
> > The only example that I can think of was fortune(6); specifically;
> > the "naughty" fortunes that were censored. Last I heard, someone
> > indicated they had ported it into ports tree.
> 
> A port was made, but it was nevery committed (or if it was, I sure
> can't find it), so that isn't a good example..
Ahh. I remember a fairly lively discussion on @stable. Followed
by an announcement with a PR listed. So I assumed it was eventually
committed. Sorry.

--Chris
> 
> -- 
>   John-Mark GurneyVoice: +1 415 225 5579
> 
>  "All that I will do, has been done, All that I have, has not."


--Chris

--


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