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authorThomas Sachau <tommy@gentoo.org>2010-11-18 13:26:19 +0000
committerThomas Sachau <tommy@gentoo.org>2010-11-18 13:26:19 +0000
commit93e7c320606d5b2d7a6f33ad56133a900df14209 (patch)
treea271ef2f850d5153f39852820d11f29d73689d10 /dev-libs/eet/metadata.xml
parentx86 stable wrt security bug #345843 (diff)
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Initial commit, based on ebuild in enlightenment overlay
(Portage version: 2.2.0_alpha2-r1/cvs/Linux x86_64)
Diffstat (limited to 'dev-libs/eet/metadata.xml')
-rw-r--r--dev-libs/eet/metadata.xml23
1 files changed, 23 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/dev-libs/eet/metadata.xml b/dev-libs/eet/metadata.xml
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+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
+<!DOCTYPE pkgmetadata SYSTEM "http://www.gentoo.org/dtd/metadata.dtd">
+<pkgmetadata>
+<herd>enlightenment</herd>
+<longdescription>
+EET is a tiny library designed to write an arbitary set of chunks of data to a file
+and optionally compress each chunk (very much like a zip file) and allow fast
+random-access reading of the file later on. It does not do zip as a zip itself has
+more complexity than is needed, and it was much simpler to impliment this once here.
+
+Eet is extremely fast, small and simple. Eet files can be very small and highly
+compressed, making them very optimal for just sending across the internet without
+having to archive, compress or decompress and install them. They allow for
+lightning-fast random-acess reads once created, making them perfect for storing data
+that is written once (or rarely) and read many times, but the program does not want
+to have to read it all in at once.
+
+It also can encode and decode data structures in memory, as well as image data for
+saving to Eet files or sending across the network to other machines, or just writing
+to arbitary files on the system. All data is encoded in a platform independant way
+and can be written and read by any architecture.
+</longdescription>
+</pkgmetadata>