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History of commit frequency

CVS Commit History:


   2018-03-18 15:21:22 by Takahiro Kambe | Files touched by this commit (37)
Log message:
lang/ruby: replace RUBY_RAILS_SUPPORTED to RUBY_RAILS_ACCEPTED

Change RUBY_RAILS_SUPPORTED to RUBY_RAILS_ACCEPTED for better wording.
   2018-03-13 17:59:02 by Takahiro Kambe | Files touched by this commit (2) | Package updated
Log message:
devel/ruby-globalid: update to 0.4.1

0.4.1						2017/10/25

* Fix occasional error while trying to deserialize arguments: "uninitialized
  constant GlobalID::Locator"

  Yuji Yaginuma (#102)
   2017-06-21 17:42:11 by Takahiro Kambe | Files touched by this commit (17)
Log message:
Bump revision due to change of PKGPATH of depending rails components' packages.
   2017-06-21 15:12:21 by Takahiro Kambe | Files touched by this commit (19) | Package updated
Log message:
Switch most of Ruby on Rails related packages to updated frame work.
   2017-05-04 17:11:25 by Takahiro Kambe | Files touched by this commit (1)
Log message:
Do not include "rails.mk" here.
   2017-05-04 17:06:18 by Takahiro Kambe | Files touched by this commit (1)
Log message:
Set RUBY_RAILS_SUPPORTED to 42 and utilize it.
   2017-04-21 23:07:09 by Min Sik Kim | Files touched by this commit (4)
Log message:
Import ruby-globalid-0.4.0 as devel/ruby-globalid

A Global ID is an app wide URI that uniquely identifies a model
instance.  This is helpful when you need a single identifier to
reference different classes of objects.  One example is job
scheduling. We need to reference a model object rather than serialize
the object itself. We can pass a Global ID that can be used to locate
the model when it's time to perform the job. The job scheduler doesn't
need to know the details of model naming and IDs, just that it has a
global identifier that references a model.  Another example is a
drop-down list of options, consisting of both Users and
Groups. Normally we'd need to come up with our own ad hoc scheme to
reference them. With Global IDs, we have a universal identifier that
works for objects of both classes.

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