The pkgsrc-2008Q2 Branch ======================== The pkgsrc developers are very proud to announce the new pkgsrc-2008Q2 branch, which has support for more packages than previous branches. As well as updated versions of many packages, the infrastructure of pkgsrc itself has been improved for better platform and compiler support. At the same time, the pkgsrc-2008Q1 branch has been deprecated, and continuing engineering starts on the pkgsrc-2008Q2 branch. With more than ten years of pkgsrc development behind us, we would like to take this opportunity to thank all of the people who have made pkgsrc the most portable packaging system in the world - to all of the users, developers and supporters a very large "Thank you" from all of us. Some highlights of the new pkgsrc-2008Q2 branch are: + a new ruby gems framework, from Stoned Elipot and Johnny Lam + many more packages have been moved to install into a staging directory - the DESTDIR work that Joerg Sonnenberger has done almost singlehandedly + many, many packages have been updated to newer versions, to take advantage of fixes and improved functionality. The following versions of packages are included in the pkgsrc-2008Q2 branch: + apache-2.2.9 + firefox-2.0.0.16 and firefox-3.0.1 + gnome-2.20.2 + kde-3.5.9 + mysql-5.0.51 + openoffice-2.4.1 + opera-9.27 + postgresql-8.3.3 + python-2.5.2 + ruby-1.8.7.22 + samba-3.0.30 + seamonkey-1.1.11 + wireshark-1.0.2 + zope-3.3.1 + other changes include + Jared Mcneill has re-worked the compiz window manager packages + the new ruby gems framework is easy to use, scalable, and very effective + Eric Gillespie has updated the subversion package to 1.5.0, and reworked part of the additional language support + thanks to Jared Mcneill, David Holland and Reinoud Zandijk, wine-1.0 works well on NetBSD + the addition of some interesting, pertinent, and shiny packages such as acroread8, bind95, blame, boxbackup (client and server), compiz-fusion, drupal6, firefox3, fltk2, freeradius2, ftmenu, gambc, gvfs, java-subversion, mediatomb, mono-tools, mowgli, msel, mtftpd, odt2text, pkg_leaves, qrencode, ruby-snmp, smbldap-tools, stegtunnel, torrentzip, unbound, and xsel. The list of platforms supported by pkgsrc is AIX, BSD/OS, Darwin (Mac OS X), DragonFly BSD, FreeBSD, HP/UX, IRIX, Interix, Linux, NetBSD, OSF1, OpenBSD, QNX and SunOS (Solaris). We are aware that support for some platforms is at a more mature stage than others, and would like to encourage feedback from users and developers on our more esoteric platforms. + continuing engineering on the "stable" branches of pkgsrc has been revitalised, and our release engineering team has done a marvellous job in pulling up changes to the stable branch. Our thanks go to them for all the hard work they do in sanity checking pullup requests, and managing the stable branches in pkgsrc. + constant bulk building on a number of platforms has improved our ability to identify potential areas of concern, and to correct them sooner. It has also improved our ability to make binary packages available, and we are working on ways to improve this further. For more information, please refer to the pkgsrc-bulk mailing list, archives available at http://mail-index.netbsd.org/pkgsrc-bulk/ + the number of packages has been increased to 7721; the number of supported platforms is currently 14. NetBSD, on all its supported architectures, is considered to be one pkgsrc platform. As always, we'd like to encourage users of the packages collection to audit-packages at least every day - this will provide notification of any packages which are vulnerable to exploit. Audit-packages is now part of the new pkg_install tools, and is now much quicker. We have removed the old audit-packages package in this pkgsrc release. Recently Tonnerre Lombard has joined the pkgsrc-security team, and has made a lot of additions to the list of vulnerable packages - a very useful and thorough job - we are grateful to him. The pkgsrc-security team do a marvellous job in tracking notifications of vulnerabilities in packages, and disseminating this information, and our sincere thanks go to them for this essential work. We'd also really appreciate it if people would install the pkgsrc/pkgtools/pkgsurvey package, and then run the pkgsurvey script for us. This will forward us a list of the packages installed on that machine, and the operating system and release level of the operating system. The results will be kept confidential, but the output will help us analyse the packages that are most used. The source tar files for the new branch can be found at: ftp://ftp.NetBSD.org/pub/pkgsrc/pkgsrc-2008Q2/pkgsrc-2008Q2.tar.gz or ftp://ftp.NetBSD.org/pub/pkgsrc/pkgsrc-2008Q2/pkgsrc-2008Q2.tar.bz2 You can also use the "pkgsrc-2008Q2" tag to check it out yourself from anoncvs.NetBSD.org or any of the mirrors. Alistair Crooks On behalf of the Packages Team The NetBSD Foundation