Next | Query returned 37 messages, browsing 11 to 20 | Previous

History of commit frequency

CVS Commit History:


   2020-09-03 19:06:29 by Thomas Klausner | Files touched by this commit (1)
Log message:
p5-Coro: annotate current test status
   2020-09-03 19:02:20 by Thomas Klausner | Files touched by this commit (2) | Package updated
Log message:
p5-Coro: update to 6.57.

Still works as badly as before:
t/00_basic.t .... Failed 3/5 subtests
t/01_unblock.t .. Failed 8/12 subtests

6.57  Wed Jul 29 15:08:44 CEST 2020
	- override AnyEvent condvar methods "properly", as AnyEvent
          has support for pluggable condvars since 2011. This also
          avoids problems with recursive waits by avoiding to mix
          impl methods with coro code.
	- allow rouse_wait to be called in a different thread.
        - slightly clarify rouse_cb/rouse_wait documentation.
	- slightly improve rouse callback performance and memory usage.
        - try to report correct calller when throwing exception in
          on $condvar->recv, not a useless line in Coro::AnyEvent.

6.56  Thu Feb 20 19:40:07 CET 2020
	- Coro::EV::time*once functions used ev_once, which is not cancelable.
          This could cause problems due to I/O watchers not being stopped up
          on exceptions/cancellation.

6.55  Fri Jul 19 17:28:09 CEST 2019
	- Coro::RWLock woke up only one reader instead of all after a wrlock
          (analyzed and patch by Maxim Skorobogatov).
        - slightly improved documentation of Coro::RWLock and RWLock testcase.
        - quickly (re)-ported to minix 3.3 before minix crashed again.
   2020-08-31 20:13:29 by Thomas Klausner | Files touched by this commit (3631)
Log message:
*: bump PKGREVISION for perl-5.32.
   2019-11-03 11:16:06 by Roland Illig | Files touched by this commit (152)
Log message:
devel/p5-*: align variable assignments

pkglint -Wall -F --only aligned --only indent p5-*

No manual corrections.
   2019-08-11 15:25:21 by Thomas Klausner | Files touched by this commit (3557)
Log message:
Bump PKGREVISIONs for perl 5.30.0
   2019-06-30 22:17:50 by Nia Alarie | Files touched by this commit (1816)
Log message:
Update packages using a search.cpan.org HOMEPAGE to metacpan.org.

The former now redirects to the latter.

This covers the most simple cases where http://search.cpan.org/dist/name
can be changed to https://metacpan.org/release/name.

Reviewed by hand to hopefully make sure no unwanted changes sneak in.
   2019-04-20 06:30:52 by Wen Heping | Files touched by this commit (2)
Log message:
Update to 6.54

Upstream changes:
6.54  Sun Dec 16 11:06:07 CET 2018
        - reinstate Coro::Select::select prototype - it breaks more than it fixes.

6.53  Sun Dec 16 10:33:15 CET 2018
        - the autogenerated prototypes of Coro::AIO now add ";" at the end
          to avoid generating named unary operators and messing up parsing
          (mostly affects aio_mlockall 4 | 8 which was parsed as
          (aio_mlockall 4) | 8).
        - do not use a prototype for select in Coro::Select, as CORE::select also
          doesn't have one.
   2018-08-22 11:48:07 by Thomas Klausner | Files touched by this commit (3558)
Log message:
Recursive bump for perl5-5.28.0
   2018-08-21 12:59:18 by Thomas Klausner | Files touched by this commit (2) | Package updated
Log message:
p5-Coro: update to 6.52.

6.52  Tue Aug 14 18:49:43 CEST 2018
	- libcoro update: allow sharing of coro threads using the pthreads
          backend among different pthreads, as is required by Coro::Multicore.
	- always allow ->call and ->eval when the coro is the current coroutine. this
          makes it possible, among other things, to call these on $Coro::main.
	- minor code cleanups.
   2017-09-27 17:34:05 by Thomas Klausner | Files touched by this commit (3)
Log message:
devel/p5-Coro: import p5-Coro-6.514

This module collection manages continuations in general, most often
in the form of cooperative threads (also called coros, or simply
"coro" in the documentation). They are similar to kernel threads
but don't (in general) run in parallel at the same time even on SMP
machines. The specific flavor of thread offered by this module also
guarantees you that it will not switch between threads unless
necessary, at easily-identified points in your program, so locking
and parallel access are rarely an issue, making thread programming
much safer and easier than using other thread models.

Next | Query returned 37 messages, browsing 11 to 20 | Previous