From the safecat README: safecat is an implementation of D. J. Bernstein's maildir algorithm. It can be used to write mail messages to a qmail-style maildir, or to write data to a "spool" directory reliably. There are no lockfiles with safecat, and nothing is left to chance. If safecat returns a successful exit status, then you can be (practically) 100% sure your data is safely committed to disk. Further, if data is written to a directory using safecat (or other implementations of the maildir algorithm), then every file in that directory is guaranteed to be complete. If safecat fails to write all of the data, there will be no file at all in the destination directory. Of course, you know that such a thing cannot be: between UNIX and the different hardware options available, a 100% guarantee is not possible. However, safecat takes every precaution possible in writing your data. Author: Len Budney WWW: http://www.pobox.com/~lbudney/linux/software/safecat.html td class='main'>index : freebsd-ports-gnome
FreeBSD GNOME current development ports (https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd-ports-gnome)
aboutsummaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/audio/qmidiarp/distinfo
Commit message (Expand)AuthorAgeFilesLines
* audio/qmidiarp: Update 0.6.4-26 -> 0.6.5yuri2018-07-101-3/+3