GNU Libidn is a fully documented implementation of the Stringprep, Punycode and
IDNA specifications. Libidn's purpose is to encode and decode internationalized
domain names.
Strigi is a daemon which uses a very fast and efficient crawler that can
index data on your harddrive. Indexing operations are performed without
hammering your system, this makes Strigi the fastest and smallest desktop
searching program.
Security, speed, compliance, and flexibility -- all of these describe lighttpd
(pron. lighty) which is rapidly redefining efficiency of a webserver; as it is
designed and optimized for high performance environments. With a small memory
footprint compared to other web-servers, effective management of the cpu-load,
and advanced feature set (FastCGI, SCGI, Auth, Output-Compression, URL-Rewriting
and many more) lighttpd is the perfect solution for every server that is suffering
load problems. And best of all it's Open Source licensed under the revised BSD
license.
CLucene is a C++ port of Lucene: the high-performance, full-featured text
search engine written in Java. CLucene is faster than lucene as it is written
in C++.
Xerces-C++ is a validating XML parser written in a portable subset of C++.
Xerces-C++ makes it easy to give your application the ability to read and
write XML data.
Vala is a new programming language that aims to bring modern programming
language features to GNOME developers without imposing any additional runtime
requirements and without using a different ABI compared to applications and
libraries written in C.
Apache Maven is a software project management and comprehension tool. Based on
the concept of a project object model (POM), Maven can manage a project's
build, reporting and documentation from a central piece of information.
Some day I hope to make it utilize the ffmpeg-mt and speed patches, as well as
providing optimization info in the notes, but I can’t currently get that to
work on Snow Leopard. Maybe later.
GNU GetText breaks eg. Ruby 1.9 builds, and some other formula I have been building too. But it is required by eg. glib. So to solve this we are going to by default not symlink gettext into the Homebrew prefix.
Formula that depend on GetText will have the gettext paths added to the brewing environment automatically. Neat.
It compiles, but I am not sure this is safe frankly. The problem is that the OS X iconv is bugged and doesn't have a 64 bit symbol for libiconv_open.
Now we must build 64 bit as otherwise everything that links to iconv must be 32 bit too. So we build a static libiconv and link glib to that. This fills in the missing symbol.
However glib still dynamically links to /usr/lib/libiconv.dylib, this is the bit I'm not happy with. It can be fixed but I'm guessing it's ok. At least at this stage of Homebrew.
All Gettext binaries fail at runtime with linking problems related to the
environ variable. According to <http://www.mail-archive.com/bug-gnulib@gnu.org/msg09272.html>
the environ variable is missing from some platforms (between them MacOS X),
and autoconf test for it, and sets HAVE_ENVIRON_DECL accordingly. A common
workaround was declaring "extern char** environ" in the code if the OS didn't
provide the environ variable, but that doesn't work since 10.5. Since then you
have to use _NSGetEnviron() function declared in crt_externs.h. This
workaround works at least since 10.3. t
Signed-off-by: Max Howell <max@methylblue.com>
ClosesHomebrew/homebrew#11
LFTP is sophisticated ftp/http client, file transfer program supporting a
number of network protocols. Like BASH, it has job control and uses readline
library for input. It has bookmarks, built-in mirror, can transfer several
files in parallel. It was designed with reliability in mind.
Signed-off-by: Max Howell <max@methylblue.com>
Added MD5 and modified tweaks to the ENV slightly.
CHICKEN is a compiler for the Scheme programming language. CHICKEN produces
portable, efficient C, supports almost all of the R5RS Scheme language
standard, and includes many enhancements and extensions. CHICKEN runs on
Linux, MacOS X, Windows, and many Unix flavours.
libffi - FFI stands for Foreign Function Interface. A foreign function
interface is the popular name for the interface that allows code written
in one language to call code written in another language.
This is the web page for a C++ unit test framework. Its design goals are to be
simple, to be idiomatic C++, and to follow the basic xUnit style to the extent
that doing so is compatible with the earlier goals. Its main differences from
other xUnit frameworks are that it uses constructors and destructors for
setup/teardown and that it requires you to represent tests as classes, instead
of methods.
The logrotate utility is designed to simplify the administration of log files
on a system which generates a lot of log files. Logrotate allows for the
automatic rotation compression, removal and mailing of log files. Logrotate
can be set to handle a log file daily, weekly, monthly or when the log file
gets to a certain size. Normally, logrotate runs as a daily cron job.
The package is not buildable on Darwin without including an additional
header, nor is it installable without teaching the Makefile what INSTALL
is on Darwin.
Signed-off-by: Max Howell <max@methylblue.com>
I made a number of modifications, including comma separating the make call so
that the prefix doesn't need to be escaped if it has spaces in it.
Also setting LDFLAGS to /usr/local/lib is done in brewkit.rb already. The
POPT_DIR var shouldn't be necessary either, but I haven't tested that yet.
Rasqal is a free software / Open Source C library that handles Resource Description
Framework (RDF) query syntaxes, query construction and query execution returning result
bindings. The supported query languages are SPARQL and RDQL.
Raptor is a free software / Open Source C library that provides a set of parsers
and serializers that generate Resource Description Framework (RDF) triples by parsing
syntaxes or serialize the triples into a syntax. The supported parsing syntaxes are
RDF/XML, N-Triples, TRiG, Turtle, RSS tag soup including all versions of RSS, Atom 1.0
and 0.3, GRDDL and microformats for HTML, XHTML and XML and RDFa. The serializing
syntaxes are RDF/XML (regular, and abbreviated), Atom 1.0, GraphViz, JSON, N-Triples,
RSS 1.0 and XMP.