# ChangeLog for app-shells/scsh # Copyright 2002-2006 Gentoo Foundation; Distributed under the GPL v2 # $Header: /var/cvsroot/gentoo-x86/app-shells/scsh/ChangeLog,v 1.19 2006/01/05 17:53:39 mkennedy Exp $ 05 Jan 2006; Matthew Kennedy scsh-0.6.6.ebuild: Synchronize with recent scsh.eclass changes. 03 Sep 2005; Michael Hanselmann scsh-0.6.6.ebuild: Stable on ppc. 31 Aug 2005; Christian Birchinger scsh-0.6.6.ebuild: Added sparc stable keyword 19 Aug 2005; Michael Hanselmann scsh-0.6.6.ebuild: Readded ~ppc. Don't drop keywords, please. 11 Aug 2005; Gustavo Zacarias scsh-0.6.6.ebuild: Back to ~sparc since the maintainer dropped it *scsh-0.6.6 (09 Aug 2005) 09 Aug 2005; Matthew Kennedy +files/0.6.6-Makefile.in-doc-dir-gentoo.patch, +scsh-0.6.6.ebuild: New upstream; First SCSH port to use the SCSH eclass; Resolves Bug #58564; Ebuild and eclass (scsh.eclass) contibuted by Johannes Brügmann and Dominik Brugger *scsh-0.6.5 (26 Feb 2004) 26 Feb 2004; metadata.xml, scsh-0.6.5.ebuild: New upstream; new metadata.xml; use new DESTDIR support *scsh-0.6.4 (15 Apr 2003) 15 Apr 2003; Matthew Kennedy scsh-0.6.4.ebuild: minor version bump *scsh-0.6.3 (15 Mar 2003) 15 Mar 2003; Matthew Kennedy scsh-0.6.3.ebuild: Minor version bump. Moved from /bin to /usr/bin. Documentation fix. 06 Dec 2002; Rodney Rees : changed sparc ~sparc keywords *scsh-0.6.1-r1 (12 Jul 2002) 28 Jul 2002; Calum Selkirk scsh-0.6.1-r1 : Added ppc to KEYWORDS. 12 Jul 2002; Seemant Kulleen scsh-0.6.1-r1 : Man page edited to remove ${D} and repoman fixes. Also, the license is just as-is or BSD. *scsh-0.6.1-r1 ( 6 Mar 2002 ) 6 Mar 2002; Karl Trygve Kalleberg ChangeLog scsh-0.6.1-r1 files/digest-scsh-0.6.1-r1: Fixed a bug where scsh.1 was installed in /usr/share/man instead of /usr/share/man/man1. *scsh-0.6.0 ( 25 Feb 2002 ) 25 Feb 2002; Karl Trygve Kalleberg ChangeLog scsh-0.6.0 files/digest-scsh-0.6.0: Scsh is a Unix shell embedded in Scheme. It provides full access to POSIX as well as extensions common to most Unix implementations. Scsh also features many abstractions to ease system programming: process abstraction, event-based interrupt handling, sophisticated I/O support and enables concurrent system programming. Ebuild contributed by Matthew Kennedy .