hamfax 0.8.1-1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

hamfax (0.8.1-1) unstable; urgency=low

  * New upstream release.
  * Add Build-Depends: libhamlib-dev to enable hamlib PTT support.
  * Disable ALSA support on !linux platforms since ALSA-OSS wrapper does not
    provide 'snd_pcm_recover' (Closes: #635876).
    - restrict Build-Depends: libasound2-dev [linux-any]
  * Add debian/rules recommended targets build-{arch,indep}.

hamfax (0.8-1) unstable; urgency=low

  * New upstream release (Closes: #625181, #604499, LP: #770985).
  * Switch to source/format "3.0 (quilt)".
  * Update for Qt4: Build-Depends; omit ./configure param --with-qt-includes.
  * Add Build-Depends: pkg-config
  * Add Build-Depends: libasound2-dev to enable ALSA support.
  * Update watch file.
  * Update Standards-Version and Uploaders.
  * Update debian/copyright dates, author email address, format.
  * Removed empty preinst, prerm.
  * Update debian/{compat,rules} and debhelper dependency for debhelper 7.
    - use dh_prep instead of dh_clean -k
    - omit explicit dh_installman
 -- Kamal Mostafa <email address hidden>   Mon,  08 Aug 2011 23:29:01 +0000

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Kamal Mostafa
Uploaded to:
Oneiric
Original maintainer:
frank
Architectures:
any
Section:
hamradio
Urgency:
Low Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
hamfax_0.8.1.orig.tar.bz2 118.8 KiB b27ae06949108a3a7198a941b55928c7d4b1870892d0c0b433f65f6ae6363f1f
hamfax_0.8.1-1.debian.tar.gz 4.1 KiB 7d67433d3c7395e4c3838ff8f7f2d4b4155aec9d85f15b9071054ecaa46163da
hamfax_0.8.1-1.dsc 1.9 KiB 9aae823045e4ace23dd480407e49dea31666859423f45bef60a7195825c440bb

Available diffs

View changes file

Binary packages built by this source

hamfax: Receive/send radio facsimile transmissions with Soundcard/PTC-II

 With this package you can send or receive radio facsimile transmissions
 using either a Linux-supported soundcard or an SCS PTC-II data controller.
 .
 Radio facsimile transmission are used most commonly by meteorological
 bureaus to provide weather maps to aircraft and shipping.