libev-perl 4.18-1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

libev-perl (4.18-1) unstable; urgency=medium


  * Team upload.

  [ Salvatore Bonaccorso ]
  * Update Vcs-Browser URL to cgit web frontend

  [ gregor herrmann ]
  * New upstream release.
  * Refresh fix-spelling-error.patch (offset).
  * Drop multiarch-checklib.patch. Makefile.PL has adapted to multiarch.
    Remove build dependency on libdevel-checklib-perl.
  * Harmonize BDS-* license names in debian/copyright.

 -- gregor herrmann <email address hidden>  Mon, 15 Sep 2014 20:18:40 +0200

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Debian Perl Group
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Debian Perl Group
Architectures:
any
Section:
perl
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
libev-perl_4.18-1.dsc 2.1 KiB 434043f96f861e1402c4a992a100c5e184eb0cf92eb2214f077a962aae4a48f2
libev-perl_4.18.orig.tar.gz 186.1 KiB 7d16b820a0b321b0631f0f9f857e87cd0b29da8e11f5686f767cb8dca424fe02
libev-perl_4.18-1.debian.tar.xz 3.8 KiB 7bd69e4355cea0a42744aa1eada655638e8a975ff635b7d619e90199462d6372

No changes file available.

Binary packages built by this source

libev-perl: Perl interface to libev, the high performance event loop

 EV provides a Perl interface to libev, a high performance and full-featured
 event loop that is loosely modelled after libevent.
 .
 It includes relative timers, absolute timers with customized rescheduling,
 synchronous signals, process status change events, event watchers dealing
 with the event loop itself, file watchers, and even limited support for
 fork events.
 .
 It uses a priority queue to manage timers and uses arrays as fundamental
 data structure. It has no artificial limitations on the number of watchers
 waiting for the same event.

libev-perl-dbgsym: debug symbols for package libev-perl

 EV provides a Perl interface to libev, a high performance and full-featured
 event loop that is loosely modelled after libevent.
 .
 It includes relative timers, absolute timers with customized rescheduling,
 synchronous signals, process status change events, event watchers dealing
 with the event loop itself, file watchers, and even limited support for
 fork events.
 .
 It uses a priority queue to manage timers and uses arrays as fundamental
 data structure. It has no artificial limitations on the number of watchers
 waiting for the same event.