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authortabthorpe <tabthorpe@FreeBSD.org>2010-01-11 22:41:36 +0800
committertabthorpe <tabthorpe@FreeBSD.org>2010-01-11 22:41:36 +0800
commitcddaf206cb7bd9680ef13bb08fee633f8dcaad67 (patch)
tree37ed21416625f07d247e55dad086ce932c2216f3 /www/ephemera
parent91f56478e4cf40b361dda3a6b0e71747dff6b026 (diff)
downloadfreebsd-ports-gnome-cddaf206cb7bd9680ef13bb08fee633f8dcaad67.tar.gz
freebsd-ports-gnome-cddaf206cb7bd9680ef13bb08fee633f8dcaad67.tar.zst
freebsd-ports-gnome-cddaf206cb7bd9680ef13bb08fee633f8dcaad67.zip
- Update to 2.0
PR: ports/142458 Submitted by: James Bailie <jimmy mammothcheese.ca> (maintainer)
Diffstat (limited to 'www/ephemera')
-rw-r--r--www/ephemera/Makefile2
-rw-r--r--www/ephemera/distinfo6
-rw-r--r--www/ephemera/pkg-descr4
3 files changed, 5 insertions, 7 deletions
diff --git a/www/ephemera/Makefile b/www/ephemera/Makefile
index 60cbba34cb13..9942bb3696eb 100644
--- a/www/ephemera/Makefile
+++ b/www/ephemera/Makefile
@@ -6,7 +6,7 @@
#
PORTNAME= blogd
-PORTVERSION= 1.10
+PORTVERSION= 2.0
CATEGORIES= www
MASTER_SITES= http://www.mammothcheese.ca/
diff --git a/www/ephemera/distinfo b/www/ephemera/distinfo
index 45bb9d519f6e..9f7a14cf289c 100644
--- a/www/ephemera/distinfo
+++ b/www/ephemera/distinfo
@@ -1,3 +1,3 @@
-MD5 (blogd-1.10.tar.gz) = b6f833a8752bfb3c1c12d2b354fc3ea3
-SHA256 (blogd-1.10.tar.gz) = b7540ce966c6b1f62566534fe5b2b57e2276372e4ae8eb255a9df91f178a0203
-SIZE (blogd-1.10.tar.gz) = 24598
+MD5 (blogd-2.0.tar.gz) = c608a1ca612c51c1fd622481de9e63d2
+SHA256 (blogd-2.0.tar.gz) = c09f9fcd37ec6c960d8cee4fcea78bc7f47bd6eea19cfe024903e225ade23772
+SIZE (blogd-2.0.tar.gz) = 23826
diff --git a/www/ephemera/pkg-descr b/www/ephemera/pkg-descr
index de827d347a7b..271051605e27 100644
--- a/www/ephemera/pkg-descr
+++ b/www/ephemera/pkg-descr
@@ -1,7 +1,5 @@
Blogd is an SCGI application server dedicated to serving-up a single blog,
implemented in 1000 lines of Munger(1). Blogd creates the simplest blog
-that is still useful, in its author's estimation. On a single-core system,
-it should be able to service 500 requests/second. More cores will yield
-proportionally better performance.
+that is still useful, in its author's estimation.
WEB: http://www.mammothcheese.ca/