Re: New port: dircproxy 1.0.5

2005-09-05 Thread Francois Ropert
On Sat, 03 Sep 2005 19:38:58 +0200
Markus Hennecke [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Francois Ropert wrote:
  I would like to submit my dircproxy 1.0.5 port for testing.
  
 
 I have done the same with the somewhat newer version 1.1.0 and
 currently I am testing it. This version is still 3 years old, and the
 website mentions a new release in the summer (without stating the
 year...). So this seems the newest stuff. You can download the port
 from http://www.markus-hennecke.de/downloads/ports/dircproxy.tgz
 
 I did not have a chance to test it on current yet, so it is done for
 3.7-stable. I think this will work on current ports too.
 
 Greetings
   Markus
 
 

Hi Markus,

Compil is ok on i386/CURRENT.
But, to be more perfect,you should replace insecure functions with
OpenBSD secure functions.

Greetings

-- 
Francois Ropert

http://openbsd.rezalfr.org



Re: New port: dircproxy 1.0.5

2005-09-03 Thread Markus Hennecke
Francois Ropert wrote:
 I would like to submit my dircproxy 1.0.5 port for testing.
 
 From pkg/DESCR :
 
 dircproxy is an IRC proxy server (bouncer) designed for people who
 use IRC from lots of different workstations or clients, but wish to
 remain connected and see what they missed while they were away. You
 connect to IRC through dircproxy, and it keeps you connected to the
 server, even after you detach your client from it. While you're
 detached, it logs channel and private messages as well as important
 events, and when you reattach it'll let you know what you missed.

I have done the same with the somewhat newer version 1.1.0 and currently
I am testing it. This version is still 3 years old, and the website
mentions a new release in the summer (without stating the year...). So
this seems the newest stuff. You can download the port from
http://www.markus-hennecke.de/downloads/ports/dircproxy.tgz

I did not have a chance to test it on current yet, so it is done for
3.7-stable. I think this will work on current ports too.

Greetings
  Markus