ports/142458: Update Port: www/blogd
James Bailie
jimmy at mammothcheese.ca
Fri Jan 8 02:10:02 UTC 2010
>Number: 142458
>Category: ports
>Synopsis: Update Port: www/blogd
>Confidential: no
>Severity: non-critical
>Priority: low
>Responsible: freebsd-ports-bugs
>State: open
>Quarter:
>Keywords:
>Date-Required:
>Class: maintainer-update
>Submitter-Id: current-users
>Arrival-Date: Fri Jan 08 02:10:01 UTC 2010
>Closed-Date:
>Last-Modified:
>Originator: James Bailie
>Release: FreeBSD 8.0-RELEASE amd64
>Organization:
>Environment:
System: FreeBSD localhost 8.0-RELEASE FreeBSD 8.0-RELEASE #18: Sat Nov 21 10:49:01 EST 2009 jbailie at localhost:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/LOCAL amd64
>Description:
>How-To-Repeat:
>Fix:
--- blogd.diff begins here ---
diff -ruN /usr/ports/www/blogd/Makefile ./blogd/Makefile
--- /usr/ports/www/blogd/Makefile 2010-01-04 16:15:00.000000000 -0500
+++ ./blogd/Makefile 2010-01-06 23:43:01.000000000 -0500
@@ -6,7 +6,7 @@
#
PORTNAME= blogd
-PORTVERSION= 1.10
+PORTVERSION= 2.0
CATEGORIES= www
MASTER_SITES= http://www.mammothcheese.ca/
diff -ruN /usr/ports/www/blogd/distinfo ./blogd/distinfo
--- /usr/ports/www/blogd/distinfo 2010-01-04 16:15:00.000000000 -0500
+++ ./blogd/distinfo 2010-01-07 20:26:19.000000000 -0500
@@ -1,3 +1,3 @@
-MD5 (blogd-1.10.tar.gz) = b6f833a8752bfb3c1c12d2b354fc3ea3
-SHA256 (blogd-1.10.tar.gz) = b7540ce966c6b1f62566534fe5b2b57e2276372e4ae8eb255a9df91f178a0203
-SIZE (blogd-1.10.tar.gz) = 24598
+MD5 (blogd-2.0.tar.gz) = 095843f78e963ec3488ead7d1f487777
+SHA256 (blogd-2.0.tar.gz) = bf69aca8811e4b837236bdf0ce9b9a80ff38bfba04ededc845e0bfd5866eaf03
+SIZE (blogd-2.0.tar.gz) = 23601
diff -ruN /usr/ports/www/blogd/pkg-descr ./blogd/pkg-descr
--- /usr/ports/www/blogd/pkg-descr 2009-06-17 09:02:23.000000000 -0400
+++ ./blogd/pkg-descr 2010-01-07 21:02:54.000000000 -0500
@@ -1,7 +1,5 @@
Blogd is an SCGI application server dedicated to serving-up a single blog,
implemented in 1000 lines of Munger(1). Blogd creates the simplest blog
-that is still useful, in its author's estimation. On a single-core system,
-it should be able to service 500 requests/second. More cores will yield
-proportionally better performance.
+that is still useful, in its author's estimation.
WEB: http://www.mammothcheese.ca/
--- blogd.diff ends here ---
>Release-Note:
>Audit-Trail:
>Unformatted:
More information about the freebsd-ports-bugs
mailing list