2011-04-17 cad/tclspice: has been broken for more than a year
2011-04-17 comms/hcfmdm: does not compile on 7.X or higher
2011-04-17 databases/mysqlcc: has been broken for almost a year
2011-04-17 devel/ruby-rjudy: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 devel/xfc: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 devel/lamson: has been broken for a half year
2011-04-17 devel/cocktail: does not build on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 devel/djgpp-gcc: has been broken for half a year
2011-04-17 devel/gauche-sdl: has been broken for a year
2011-04-17 devel/gdb53-act: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x and up
2011-04-17 editors/zed: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 games/aqbubble: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 graphics/libvisual-plugins: has been broken for 3 years
2011-04-17 japanese/roundcube: has been broken for almost a year
2011-04-17 japanese/tkstep80: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 lang/u++: has been broken for over a half year
2011-04-17 lang/pugs: has been broken for over a year
2011-04-17 lang/mozart: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 math/linalg: does not build on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 math/R-cran-igraph: has been broken for over a half year
2011-04-17 misc/ftree: has been broken for over a half year
2011-04-17 multimedia/katchtv: has been broken for a half year
2011-04-17 multimedia/libomxil-bellagio: has been broken for almost a year
2011-04-17 multimedia/banshee-mirage: has been broken for over a half year
2011-04-17 net-p2p/trackerbt: has been broken for a half year
2011-04-17 net/cap: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 net/ggsd: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 net/b2bua: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 net/penguintv: has been broken for a half year
2011-04-17 news/openftd: has been broken for almost a year
2011-04-17 palm/romeo: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 science/pcp: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 science/elmer-fem: has been broken for over a year
2011-04-17 security/newpki-lib: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 security/newpki-server: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 security/xmlsec: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 security/f-protd: has been broken for over a year
2011-04-17 sysutils/xwlans: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x or newer
2011-04-17 www/bk_edit: does not compile on FreeBSD 7.x and newer
2011-04-17 www/bricolage: has been broken for a half year
2011-04-17 x11-toolkits/gauche-gtk: has been broken for a year
2011-04-17 x11-toolkits/gambas2-gb-qt: has been broken for over a year
2011-04-17 x11-toolkits/php-gtk2: has been broken for over a half year
2011-04-17 x11-toolkits/p5-Tcl-Tk: has been broken for 2 year
2011-04-17 x11/metisse: has been broken for over a half year
2011-04-11 emulators/xmamegui: development has ceased; try emulators/qmc2 instead
2011-04-11 games/airrox: development has ceased
2011-04-11 games/bfm: development has ceased; website disappeared
2011-04-11 games/xracer: has not been developed for 10 years
2011-04-11 net-p2p/gift-ares: development has ceased; does not work
2011-04-11 net-p2p/torrent_swapper: development has ceased (last release is of 2006)
2011-04-11 net-p2p/torrentvolve: development has ceased, and last release is beta
2011-04-11 sysutils/gag: no point in having it as a port, can be downloaded from the website and burned
folding room dividers. As an open source project, Byobu is an elegant
enhancement of the otherwise functional, plain, practical GNU Screen. Byobu
includes an enhanced profile and configuration utilities for the GNU screen
window manager, such as toggle-able system status notifications.
WWW: https://launchpad.net/byobu
PR: ports/156267
Submitted by: Gea-Suan Lin <gslin at gslin.org>
restore or transfer of zfs filesystems, either locally or remotely.
Zxfer has the following features:
* Written in sh with only one dependency, rsync. Rsync mode is not used
in a typical restore, hence in that situation all you need is the
zxfer script, your backup and an install CD/DVD.
* Reliability is first priority - the only methods of transfer allowed
are those that checksum/hash the transferred data.
* Transfer to or from a remote host via ssh.
* Recursive and incremental transfer of filesystems (via snapshots).
* Transfer properties and sources of those properties (e.g. local or
inherited).
* Override properties in the transfer, e.g. for archival purposes
it is useful to override "copies" and "compression".
* Create all filesystems on the destination as necessary.
* Write backup files to aid in automatically restoring the original
properties that have been overridden.
* A comprehensive man page with examples.
* Can be set to beep on error or when done, useful for long transfers.
* Features an rsync mode for when two different snapshotting regimes are on
source and destination, and zfs send/receive won't work.
WWW: http://www.zxfer.org
PR: ports/156126
Submitted by: Ivan Dreckman <ivannashdreckman@fastmail.fm>
user to slow down jobs that would otherwise choke the processor. It is also
helpful on laptops where we want to avoid genrating a lot of heat.
WWW: http://cpulimit.sourceforge.net/
PR: ports/156064
Submitted by: Jesse <jessefrgsmith@yahoo.ca>
available on the system and create moer on-disk swap as needed. Additionally
Swap Extender will remove unwanted swap space when memory is freed.
WWW: http://makeapbi.sourceforge.net/
PR: ports/155955
Submitted by: Jesse Smith <jessefrgsmith@yahoo.ca>
displaying information from the coreboot table. It is intended for x86-based
systems (both 32-bit and 64-bit) that use coreboot.
The coreboot table resides in low physical memory, and may be accessed
through the /dev/mem interface. It is created at boot time by coreboot, and
contains various system information such as the type of mainboard in use. It
specifies locations in the CMOS (nonvolatile RAM) where the coreboot
parameters are stored.
For information about coreboot, see http://www.coreboot.org/.
WWW: http://www.coreboot.org/Nvramtool
PR: ports/155583
Submitted by: Andrey Zonov <andrey at zonov.org>
of servers within a production environment. This allows for scaleable and
fast deploys in environments of hundreds to tens of thousands of servers
where centralized distribution systems wouldn't otherwise function.
WWW: http://github.com/lg/murder
Garcon is an implementation of the freedesktop.org menu specification
replacing the former Xfce menu library libxfce4menu. It is based on
GLib/GIO only and aims at covering the entire specification except for
legacy menus.
WWW: http://www.xfce.org/
resource management systems.
The library tries to be compliant with the DRMAA 1.0 Python language binding.
WWW: http://code.google.com/p/drmaa-python/
PR: ports/154913
Submitted by: Mykola Dzham <i at levsha.me>
a subdirectory of another, already installed system. It doesn't require an
installation CD, just access to a Debian repository.
In FreeBSD, you can use debootstrap to install Debian GNU/kFreeBSD into
a subdirectory of your existing FreeBSD installation (i386 or amd64)
and then run Debian GNU/kFreeBSD (i386 or amd64) in a jail or chroot.
WWW: http://wiki.debian.org/Debootstrap
2011-02-20 devel/root: Port does not build on supported versions of FreeBSD
2011-02-20 net/ztelnet: unfetchable / Does not compile with GCC 4.2
2011-02-20 print/kaspaliste: Does not compile with GCC 4.2
2011-02-20 sysutils/perf: Does not build on supported versions of FreeBSD
to manage their own domains, DNS entries, email addresses, ftp accounts and
more.
WWW: http://www.froxlor.org/
PR: ports/154426
Submitted by: Marco Steinbach <coco at executive-computing.de>
Feature safe: yes
configuration management to your entire infrastructure. With Chef, you can:
* Manage your servers by writing code, not by running commands.
* Integrate tightly with your applications, databases, LDAP directories, and
more.
* Easily configure applications that require knowledge about your entire
infrastructure ("What systems are running my application?" "What is the
current master database server?")
WWW: http://wiki.opscode.com/display/chef/Home
PR: ports/153504
Submitted by: Renaud Chaput <renchap@cocoa-x.com>
Feature safe: yes
hardlink is a tool which detects multiple copies of the same file and replaces
them with hardlinks.
WWW: http://jak-linux.org/projects/hardlink/
PR: ports/154020
Submitted by: Douglas William Thrift <douglas@douglasthrift.net>
Feature safe: yes
and no one has any of interest to fix it. It's an ancient software and
is part of GNOME 1. It's time for us to get rid of some of GNOME 1 stuff as
the GNOME 3 is coming sometimes in 2011. Any ports that required libcappet
are removed and ports that have optional aren't remove.
PR: ports/153355
Discussed with: My team, FreeBSD GNOME Team
Tested by: pointyhat-exp (thanks pav!)
2010-12-30 databases/p5-sqlrelay: broken and upstream disapeared
2010-12-30 devel/php-dbg2: No upstream support
2010-12-30 dns/fourcdns: upstream has disapeared
2010-12-31 emulators/win4bsd: Development has ceased and distfile is no longer available
2010-12-31 french/mozilla-flp: www/seamonkey port is deprecated. Consider using the www/firefox-i18n.
2010-12-31 french/xtel: Minitel services will be discontinued at the end of 2010.
2010-12-30 ftp/ftpq: upstream has disapeared
2010-12-30 graphics/paintlib: does not compile with new tiff and no more maintained upstream
2010-12-30 graphics/g3dviewer: does not build with gcc 4.2, upstream disapeared
2010-12-30 lang/scriba: Does not compile with gcc 4.2+, looks like abandonware
2010-12-30 math/rascal: Broken on every arch since 2008, looks like an abandonware
2010-12-31 net-mgmt/nrg: Project has vanished. Use cacti instead.
2010-12-31 security/hostsentry: Project is dead.
2010-12-31 sysutils/kcube: Project has vanished
2010-12-31 www/cybercalendar: has been unmaintained since 2001 and is unusable with dates after 2010 (see ports/150974)
2010-12-31 www/flock: Flock 3 moves from Firefox to Chromium
2010-12-31 www/linux-flock: Flock 3 moves from Firefox to Chromium
2010-12-30 x11-clocks/xtu: Looks like abandonware
Leave java/tya in for now, as it has outstanding PRs.
"cronolog" is a simple program that reads log messages from its input
and writes them to a set of output files, the names of which are
constructed using template and the current date and time.
"cronolog" is intended to be used in conjunction with a Web server, such
as Apache to split the access log into daily or monthly logs. E.g.:
TransferLog "|/www/sbin/cronolog /www/logs/%Y/%m/%d/access.log"
ErrorLog "|/www/sbin/cronolog /www/logs/%Y/%m/%d/errors.log"
would instruct Apache to pipe its access and error log messages into
separate copies of cronolog, which would create new log files each day
in a directory hierarchy structured by date, i.e. on 31 December 1996
messages would be written to:
/www/logs/1996/12/31/access.log
/www/logs/1996/12/31/errors.log
After midnight the following files would be used:
/www/logs/1997/01/01/access.log
/www/logs/1997/01/01/errors.log
WWW: http://cronolog.org/
PR: ports/152794
Submitted by: Jason Helfman <jhelfman at experts-exchange.com>
Approved by: itetcu (mentor) (implicit)
intrusion by looking for suspicious changes in system files. Crackers, in fact,
to do their evil or just to make sure they can work their way back into the
system, often change some configuration files, executables and/or log files
(usually with rootkits); thus leaving signs of the break-in.
WWW: http://www.kernel-panic.it/software/stdiff/
images. It can read the file systems HFS (Mac OS Standard), HFS+ (Mac OS
Extended) and HFSX (Mac OS Extended with case sensitive file names).
HFSExplorer allows you to browse your Mac volumes with a graphical file system
browser, extract files (copy to hard disk), view detailed information about the
volume and create disk images from the volume.
HFSExplorer can also read most .dmg disk images created on a Mac, including zlib
/ bzip2 compressed images and AES-128 encrypted images. It supports the
partition schemes Master Boot Record, GUID Partition Table and Apple Partition
Map natively.
WWW: http://hem.bredband.net/catacombae/hfsx.html
PR: ports/149069
Submitted by: Gvozdikov Veniamin [g.veniamin googlemail.com]
viewer that runs in a terminal and provides fast and valuable HTTP statistics
for system administrators that require a visual report on the fly.
WWW: http://goaccess.prosoftcorp.com/
PR: ports/152332
Submitted by: Sofian Brabez <sbrabez at gmail.com>
File::Stat::ModeString is a Perl5 module provides a few functions for
conversionbetween binary and literal representations of file mode bits,
including file type.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/File-Stat-ModeString/
PR: ports/152124
Submitted by: Jase Thew <freebsd@beardz.net>
file's contents or attributes have changed. It maintains several pieces
of information about the file: a digest (currently only MD5 is
supported), its inode number, its mode, the uid of its owner, the gid of
its group owner, and its last modification time.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/File-Signature/
Approved by: sahil@ (mentor)
a number of parameters that can be passed to allow configuration of the
logger.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/File-Log/
PR: ports/151944
Submitted by: Tom Judge <tom@tomjudge.com>
pam_mount is a Pluggable Authentication Module that can mount volumes for a
user session. This module is aimed at environments with central file servers
that a user wishes to mount on login and unmount on logout, such as
(semi-)diskless stations where many users can logon and where statically
mounting the entire /home from a server is a security risk, or listing all
possible volumes in /etc/fstab is not feasible.
WWW: http://pam-mount.sourceforge.net/
Submitted by: Eitan Adler <lists _at_ eitanadler.com>
Approved by: glarkin (mentor, implicit)
reversible hexdump is a hexdump/hex2bin-toolkit that dumps to a special
readable and reversible hexadecimal byte-dump,where you can not only change
bytes, but also insert or delete bytes. It has a flush-switch, where it will
output hexbytes for each single char it reads. This is especially useful for
watching output from slow devices (e.g., serial devices like mice). The
hex2bin-utility (the reverse-hexdump) not only accepts hexbytes for input,
but also double-quoted strings with most of the escape-chars known
from C and makes good attempts at undumping even hexdumps with repetition-lines
(a "*" on its own line). It's written in ANSI C.
WWW: http://gnuwin32.sourceforge.net/packages/hextools.htm