70f041f905
Changes in version 1.12.3, released on December 31, 2013 * In the mdoc(7) SYNOPSIS, line breaks and hanging indentation now work correctly for .Fo/.Fa/.Fc and .Fn blocks. Thanks to Franco Fichtner for doing part of the work. * The mdoc(7) .Bk macro got some addititonal bugfixes. * In mdoc(7) macro arguments, double quotes can now be quoted by doubling them, just like in man(7). Thanks to Tsugutomo ENAMI for the patch. * At the end of man(7) macro lines, end-of-sentence spacing now works. Thanks to Franco Fichtner for the patch. * For backward compatibility, the man(7) parser now supports the man-ext .UR/.UE (uniform resource identifier) block macros. * The man(7) parser now handles closing blocks that are not open more gracefully. * The man(7) parser now ignores blank lines right after .SH and .SS. * In the man(7) formatter, reset indentation when leaving a block, not just when entering the next one. * The roff(7) .nr request now supports incrementing and decrementing number registers and stops parsing the number right before the first non-digit character. * The roff(7) parser now supports the alternative escape sequence syntax \C'uXXXX' for Unicode characters. * The roff(7) parser now parses and ignores the .fam (font family) and .hw (hyphenation points) requests and the \d and \u escape sequences. * The roff(7) manual got a new ESCAPE SEQUENCE REFERENCE. Changes in version 1.12.2, released on Oktober 5, 2013 * The mdoc(7) to man(7) converter, to be called as mandoc -Tman, is now fully functional. * The mandoc(1) utility now supports the -Ios (default operating system) input option, and the -Tutf8 output mode now actually works. * The mandocdb(8) utility no longer truncates existing databases when starting to build new ones, but only replaces them when the build actually succeeds. * The man(7) parser now supports the PD macro (paragraph distance), and (for GNU man-ext compatibility only) EX (example block) and EE (example end). Plus several bugfixes regarding indentation, line breaks, and vertical spacing, and regarding RS following TP. * The roff(7) parser now supports the \f(BI (bold+italic) font escape, the \z (zero cursor advance) escape and the cc (change control character) and it (input line trap) requests. Plus bugfixes regarding the \t (tab) escape, nested escape sequences, and conditional requests. * In mdoc(7), several bugs were fixed related to UTF-8 output of quoting enclosures, delimiter handling, list indentation and horizontal and vertical spacing, formatting of the Lk, %U, and %C macros, plus some bugfixes related to the handling of syntax errors like badly nested font blocks, stray Ta macros outside column lists, unterminated It Xo blocks, and non-text children of Nm blocks. * In tbl(7), the width of horizontal spans and the vertical spacing around tables was corrected, and in man(7) files, a crash was fixed that was triggered by some particular unclosed T{ macros. * For mandoc developers, we now provide a tbl(3) library manual and gmdiff, a very small, very simplistic groff-versus-mandoc output comparison tool. |
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apache2 | ||
atheros | ||
broadcom/rpi-firmware/dist | ||
bsd | ||
cddl | ||
gpl2 | ||
gpl3 | ||
historical | ||
ibm-public | ||
intel-fw-eula | ||
intel-fw-public | ||
lgpl3 | ||
mit | ||
public-domain | ||
realtek | ||
zlib/pigz | ||
Makefile | ||
README |
$NetBSD: README,v 1.15 2012/06/14 04:14:36 riz Exp $ Organization of Sources: This directory hierarchy is using an organization that separates source for programs that we have obtained from external third parties (where NetBSD is not the primary maintainer) from the system source. The hierarchy is grouped by license, and then package per license, and is organized as follows: external/ Makefile Descend into the license sub-directories. <license>/ Per-license sub-directories. Makefile Descend into the package sub-directories. <package>/ Per-package sub-directories. Makefile Build the package. dist/ The third-party source for a given package. bin/ lib/ sbin/ BSD makefiles "reach over" from these into "../dist/". This arrangement allows for packages to be easily disabled or excised as necessary, either on a per-license or per-package basis. The licenses currently used are: apache2 Apache 2.0 license. http://www.opensource.org/licenses/apache2.0.php atheros Atheros License. bsd BSD (or equivalent) licensed software, possibly with the "advertising clause". http://www.opensource.org/licenses/bsd-license.php cddl Common Development and Distribution License (the sun license which is based on the Mozilla Public License version 1.1). http://www.opensource.org/licenses/cddl1.php gpl2 GNU Public License, version 2 (or earlier). http://www.opensource.org/licenses/gpl-2.0.php gpl3 GNU Public License, version 3. http://www.opensource.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.html historical Lucent's old license: http://www.opensource.org/licenses/historical.php ibm-public IBM's public license: http://www.opensource.org/licenses/ibmpl.php intel-fw-eula Intel firmware license with redistribution restricted to OEM. intel-fw-public Intel firmware license permitting redistribution with terms similar to BSD licensed software. intel-public Intel license permitting redistribution with terms similar to BSD licensed software. mit MIT (X11) style license. http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php public-domain Non-license for code that has been explicitly put into the Public Domain. realtek RealTek license. zlib Zlib (BSD-like) license. http://www.zlib.net/zlib_license.html If a package has components covered by different licenses (for example, GPL2 and the LGPL), use the <license> subdirectory for the more restrictive license. If a package allows the choice of a license to use, we'll generally use the less restrictive license. If in doubt about where a package should be located, please contact <core@NetBSD.org> for advice. Migration Strategy: Eventually src/dist (and associated framework in other base source directories) and src/gnu will be migrated to this hierarchy. Maintenance Strategy: The sources under src/external/<license>/<package>/dist/ are generally a combination of a published distribution plus changes that we submit to the maintainers and that are not yet published by them. Make sure all changes made to the external sources are submitted to the appropriate maintainer, but only after coordinating with the NetBSD maintainers.