summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorTorsten Veller <tove@gentoo.org>2009-10-28 09:15:56 +0000
committerTorsten Veller <tove@gentoo.org>2009-10-28 09:15:56 +0000
commitf428da6f179a1da586592464b40365066b057177 (patch)
treeeb2b9e16903c1f9bd5d44ba8f166a5c16b1488ad /sci-misc/netlogo-bin
parenthumpback is AWOL (#34793). Adding maintainer-needed (diff)
downloadgentoo-2-f428da6f179a1da586592464b40365066b057177.tar.gz
gentoo-2-f428da6f179a1da586592464b40365066b057177.tar.bz2
gentoo-2-f428da6f179a1da586592464b40365066b057177.zip
humpback is AWOL (#34793). Adding maintainer-needed
(Portage version: 2.2_rc46/cvs/Linux x86_64)
Diffstat (limited to 'sci-misc/netlogo-bin')
-rw-r--r--sci-misc/netlogo-bin/ChangeLog5
-rw-r--r--sci-misc/netlogo-bin/metadata.xml3
2 files changed, 7 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/sci-misc/netlogo-bin/ChangeLog b/sci-misc/netlogo-bin/ChangeLog
index 213230913420..e26a0a859c2a 100644
--- a/sci-misc/netlogo-bin/ChangeLog
+++ b/sci-misc/netlogo-bin/ChangeLog
@@ -1,6 +1,9 @@
# ChangeLog for sci-misc/netlogo-bin
# Copyright 1999-2009 Gentoo Foundation; Distributed under the GPL v2
-# $Header: /var/cvsroot/gentoo-x86/sci-misc/netlogo-bin/ChangeLog,v 1.9 2009/04/17 20:03:22 caster Exp $
+# $Header: /var/cvsroot/gentoo-x86/sci-misc/netlogo-bin/ChangeLog,v 1.10 2009/10/28 09:15:56 tove Exp $
+
+ 28 Oct 2009; Torsten Veller <tove@gentoo.org> metadata.xml:
+ humpback is AWOL (#34793). Adding maintainer-needed
17 Apr 2009; Vlastimil Babka <caster@gentoo.org> netlogo-bin-3.0.2,
netlogo-bin-3.1.3, netlogo-bin-3.1.4:
diff --git a/sci-misc/netlogo-bin/metadata.xml b/sci-misc/netlogo-bin/metadata.xml
index 34298b44458d..fd0c13e5bcd6 100644
--- a/sci-misc/netlogo-bin/metadata.xml
+++ b/sci-misc/netlogo-bin/metadata.xml
@@ -4,6 +4,9 @@
<pkgmetadata>
<herd>no-herd</herd>
<maintainer>
+ <email>maintainer-needed@gentoo.org</email>
+</maintainer>
+<maintainer>
<email>humpback@gentoo.org</email>
</maintainer>
<longdescription>NetLogo is a programmable modeling environment for simulating natural and social phenomena. It is particularly well suited for modeling complex systems developing over time. Modelers can give instructions to hundreds or thousands of independent "agents" all operating concurrently. This makes it possible to explore the connection between the micro-level behavior of individuals and the macro-level patterns that emerge from the interaction of many individuals.</longdescription>