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The UDUNITS-2 package differs from the previous UDUNITS package in the
following ways:
Support for non-ASCII characters. The original UDUNITS package only
supports the ASCII character set. The UDUNITS-2 package supports
the following character sets: ASCII, ISO 8859-1 (Latin 1), and the
UTF-8 encoding of ISO 10646 (Unicode). This means that unit string
specifications like "µ°F·Ω⁻¹" are now supported (your viewer
must support UTF-8 to display this string correctly).
Support for logarithmic units. The unit string specification
"0.1 lg(re 1 mW)" specifies a deciBel unit with a one milliwatt
reference level. Meteorologists should note that the unit "dBZ"
(i.e., "0.1 lg(re um^3)") is now supported.
Persistent value converters. It is now possible to obtain a converter
data-object, which can be used to convert numeric values in one
unit to numeric values in another, compatible unit. The values can
be float, double, or one-dimensional arrays of floats or doubles.
Improved API. Due to the above changes, it was not possible to keep
the application programming interface of the original UDUNITS
package. Beginning with version 2.1.0, however, the package
contains a thin UDUNITS API to the UDUNITS-2 library, so code
written to the original API can simply be recompiled and relinked
against the new package. Because the original UDUNITS API uses the
"utUnit" data-structure and the UDUNITS-2 API uses pointers to
"ut_unit" data-structures, a small memory-leak is possible in code
that creates many units. This leak can be avoided by calling the
new method utFree(utUnit*) when the unit is no longer needed.
XML unit database. The unit database is encoded using human-readable
XML rather than a custom format. The XML parser included in the
package supports an <import> element to allow easy and convenient
customization.
One thing that has not changed is that all unit string specifications
understood by the original UDUNITS package are also understood by the
new UDUNITS-2 package.
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https://opensource.org/licenses/AFL-3.0
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Reported by pkglint, manually checked. None of these license names is
mentioned anywhere.
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SDK headers, libraries and build scripts, allowing cross-compilation for
MorphOS.
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Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0
International Public License
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sysutils/bfs/Makefile .. convert to LICENSE= 0-clause-bsd
licenses/0-clause-bsd .. renamed from isc-AUTHOR (with minor edit on YEAR)
licenses/isc-AUTHOR .. remvoed
See thread of starting at
http://mail-index.netbsd.org/tech-pkg/2019/12/15/msg022307.html
Thanks
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Enlightenment 16 uses a modified (non-standard) MIT license that
includes an advertising clause. (This makes it incompatible with the
GPL.) I've named it enlightenment16 to differentiate that Enlightenment
>=17 releases use the 2-Clause BSD. (Enlightenment 16 continues to be
developed independently, and is of current interest to pkgsrc users.)
In some places, this is referred to as the "MIT With Advertising"
license, but I'm not aware of other projects using this variant. If it
becomes more broadly relevant to pkgsrc, we could rename it such.
(This should have been added a long time ago, the wm/enlightenment
package simply has never had a LICENSE variable set. Better late than
never.)
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- Update to latest shareware data file
- Add License (taken from Debian)
- Take maintainership
OK from wiz@.
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Thanks to gdt@ for pointing out.
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The biopython license is _very_ similar, but not identical, to many
other open source licenses used throughout pkgsrc. The gratuitous
differences are being addressed by the project through an effort to
relicense all files to the 3-clause BSD license. In the meantime,
Debian has accepted that the current biopython license meets the DFSG
and includes the package in their main distribution. Consequently,
rename the license file and add it to DEFAULT_ACCEPTABLE_LICENSES.
See http://mail-index.netbsd.org/pkgsrc-changes/2019/08/13/msg195804.html.
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The Biopython package contains high-quality, reusable modules and
scripts written in Python to make it as easy as possible to use Python
for bioinformatics. The Biopython includes the follwing: the ability
to parse bioinformatics files into python utilizable data structures,
including support for the formats such as Blast output, Clustalw,
FASTA, GenBank, PubMed and Medicine, various Expasy files, SCOP,
Rebase, UniGene, and SwissProt.
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This is a free software license according to the FSF:
https://www.gnu.org/licenses/license-list.en.html#CeCILL-B
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This license is used by MongoDB. It does not seem to be approved by
OSI and FSF, and there is no basis for expecting it to be approved, so
use a -license suffix.
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out my mistake.
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https://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/gpl-2.0.txt
Whitespace and reflow changes only.
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https://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/lgpl-2.0.txt
Whitespace changes, and adds a missing word ("Software" in "Free Software Foundation").
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Distfile does not exist and was not redistributable.
Package was marked BROKEN for this reason for some time.
Newer version available, package could be re-added if someone is interested.
(Last update was 2007.)
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Last update in 2013, remove sun-jdk7/sun-jre7 instead
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* used in sysutils/lsof
* derived from spencer-94: https://spdx.org/licenses/Spencer-94.html
* treated as Free and GPL compatible by Fedora Project
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https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/legalcode.txt
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Since 20180807a the license was changed, adjust accordingly.
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Libretro is a simple but powerful development interface that allows for the
easy creation of emulators, games and multimedia applications that can plug
straight into any libretro-compatible frontend. This development interface is
open to others so that they can run these pluggable emulator and game cores
also in their own programs or devices.
FB Alpha (Final Burn Alpha) is an arcade game emulator.
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license.
mame-license is the last license used by MAME prior to their switch to
"modified-bsd AND gnu-gpl-v2".
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Some packages which are neither old versions of MAME or Picodrive
use this license in wip, and will be imported soon(TM).
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No incompatibility with fsf/osi/dfsg, Debian packages it...
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The license file has only been used by this one package, therefore it was
safe to replace the text with the current license text, as taken from
README.md.
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A permissive license with a regular disclaimer.
Accepted by Debian.
Example (known) software: zenlis.
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On 30 December 2015 Alcatel-Lucent (the company that inherited Bell Laboratories from AT&T in the trivestiture from 1996) transfered the copyright to all sources to Gerard Holzmann, explicitly to enable a standard open source release under the BSD 3-Clause license. Starting with Spin Version 6.4.5 all Spin code, sources and executables, are now available under the BSD 3-Clause license.
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Bonjour provides service advertising and discovery on the local
network via multicast DNS. These files use SWIG to provide a Python
interface for use by applications to interact with Bonjour.through
mDNSResponder.
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