Date: Sat, 3 Nov 2007 19:24:44 +0800 (CST) From: Gea-Suan Lin <gslin@gslin.org> To: FreeBSD-gnats-submit@FreeBSD.org Cc: gslin@gslin.org Subject: ports/117784: [NEW PORT] www/p5-HTML-Sanitizer: HTML Sanitizer Message-ID: <20071103112444.161111CC3C@ccreader.NCTU.edu.tw> Resent-Message-ID: <200711031140.lA3Be1bh078012@freefall.freebsd.org>
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>Number: 117784 >Category: ports >Synopsis: [NEW PORT] www/p5-HTML-Sanitizer: HTML Sanitizer >Confidential: no >Severity: non-critical >Priority: low >Responsible: freebsd-ports-bugs >State: open >Quarter: >Keywords: >Date-Required: >Class: change-request >Submitter-Id: current-users >Arrival-Date: Sat Nov 03 11:40:00 UTC 2007 >Closed-Date: >Last-Modified: >Originator: Gea-Suan Lin >Release: FreeBSD 6.3-PRERELEASE i386 >Organization: >Environment: System: FreeBSD ccreader.NCTU.edu.tw 6.3-PRERELEASE FreeBSD 6.3-PRERELEASE #2: Thu Oct 25 05:54:55 CST 2007 >Description: This module acts as a filter for HTML. It is not a validator, though it might be possible to write a validator-like tool with it. It's intended to strip out unwanted HTML elements and attributes and leave you with non-dangerous HTML code that you should be able to trust. WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/HTML-Sanitizer/ Generated with FreeBSD Port Tools 0.77 >How-To-Repeat: >Fix: --- p5-HTML-Sanitizer-0.04.shar begins here --- # This is a shell archive. Save it in a file, remove anything before # this line, and then unpack it by entering "sh file". Note, it may # create directories; files and directories will be owned by you and # have default permissions. # # This archive contains: # # p5-HTML-Sanitizer # p5-HTML-Sanitizer/pkg-descr # p5-HTML-Sanitizer/Makefile # p5-HTML-Sanitizer/pkg-plist # p5-HTML-Sanitizer/distinfo # echo c - p5-HTML-Sanitizer mkdir -p p5-HTML-Sanitizer > /dev/null 2>&1 echo x - p5-HTML-Sanitizer/pkg-descr sed 's/^X//' >p5-HTML-Sanitizer/pkg-descr << 'END-of-p5-HTML-Sanitizer/pkg-descr' XThis module acts as a filter for HTML. It is not a validator, though Xit might be possible to write a validator-like tool with it. It's Xintended to strip out unwanted HTML elements and attributes and leave Xyou with non-dangerous HTML code that you should be able to trust. X XWWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/HTML-Sanitizer/ END-of-p5-HTML-Sanitizer/pkg-descr echo x - p5-HTML-Sanitizer/Makefile sed 's/^X//' >p5-HTML-Sanitizer/Makefile << 'END-of-p5-HTML-Sanitizer/Makefile' X# New ports collection makefile for: p5-HTML-Sanitizer X# Date created: 2007-11-03 X# Whom: Gea-Suan Lin <gslin@gslin.org> X# X# $FreeBSD$ X# X XPORTNAME= HTML-Sanitizer XPORTVERSION= 0.04 XCATEGORIES= www security perl5 XMASTER_SITES= CPAN XMASTER_SITE_SUBDIR= HTML XPKGNAMEPREFIX= p5- X XMAINTAINER= gslin@gslin.org XCOMMENT= HTML Sanitizer X XRUN_DEPENDS= ${SITE_PERL}/HTML/TreeBuilder.pm:${PORTSDIR}/www/p5-HTML-Tree X XPERL_CONFIGURE= yes X XMAN3= HTML::Sanitizer.3 X X.include <bsd.port.mk> END-of-p5-HTML-Sanitizer/Makefile echo x - p5-HTML-Sanitizer/pkg-plist sed 's/^X//' >p5-HTML-Sanitizer/pkg-plist << 'END-of-p5-HTML-Sanitizer/pkg-plist' X@comment $FreeBSD$ X%%SITE_PERL%%/%%PERL_ARCH%%/auto/HTML/Sanitizer/.packlist X%%SITE_PERL%%/HTML/Sanitizer.pm X@dirrmtry %%SITE_PERL%%/HTML X@dirrmtry %%SITE_PERL%%/%%PERL_ARCH%%/auto/HTML/Sanitizer X@dirrmtry %%SITE_PERL%%/%%PERL_ARCH%%/auto/HTML END-of-p5-HTML-Sanitizer/pkg-plist echo x - p5-HTML-Sanitizer/distinfo sed 's/^X//' >p5-HTML-Sanitizer/distinfo << 'END-of-p5-HTML-Sanitizer/distinfo' XMD5 (HTML-Sanitizer-0.04.tar.gz) = 0f3bc3e6eff329a0b913c549bf7e330f XSHA256 (HTML-Sanitizer-0.04.tar.gz) = e008872b2bcb815ae7c05062c5ac37a0fecc54ecbfcedfa62fc15b0ff8d73956 XSIZE (HTML-Sanitizer-0.04.tar.gz) = 8972 END-of-p5-HTML-Sanitizer/distinfo exit --- p5-HTML-Sanitizer-0.04.shar ends here --- >Release-Note: >Audit-Trail: >Unformatted:
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