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Analyzed about 21 hours ago. based on code collected about 21 hours ago.
Posted almost 8 years ago by [email protected] (Michal Čihař)
Full list of changes: Make parameters to CancelCall and AnswerCall optional. Added support for UTF-16 Unicode chars (emojis). You can download it from https://wammu.eu/download/. Support this program by donations https://wammu.eu/donate/.
Posted about 8 years ago by [email protected] (Michal Čihař)
Full list of changes: Improved support for ZTE MF626. Fixed USSD handling with longer codes. Increased default value for StatusFrequency. Improved SMSD response on signals. Improved SMSD throughput on big queue. Improved SMSD compatibility with ... [More] Microsoft SQL Server. You can download it from https://wammu.eu/download/. Support this program by donations https://wammu.eu/donate/. [Less]
Posted about 8 years ago by [email protected] (Michal Čihař)
Weblate 2.13 has been released today pretty much on the schedule. The most important change being more fine grained access control and some smaller UI improvements. There are other new features and bug fixes as well. Full list of changes: Fixed ... [More] quality checks on translation templates. Added quality check to trigger on losing translation. Add option to view pending suggestions from user. Add option to automatically build component lists. Default dashboard for unauthenticated users can be configured. Add option to browse 25 random strings for review. History now indicates string change. Better error reporting when adding new translation. Added per language search within project. Group ACLs can now be limited to certain permissions. The per project ALCs are now implemented using Group ACL. Added more fine grained privileges control. Various minor UI improvements. If you are upgrading from older version, please follow our upgrading instructions. You can find more information about Weblate on https://weblate.org, the code is hosted on Github. If you are curious how it looks, you can try it out on demo server. You can login there with demo account using demo password or register your own user. Weblate is also being used on https://hosted.weblate.org/ as official translating service for phpMyAdmin, OsmAnd, Aptoide, FreedomBox, Weblate itself and many other projects. Should you be looking for hosting of translations for your project, I'm happy to host them for you or help with setting it up on your infrastructure. Further development of Weblate would not be possible without people providing donations, thanks to everybody who have helped so far! The roadmap for next release is just being prepared, you can influence this by expressing support for individual issues either by comments or by providing bounty for them. Filed under: Debian English Gammu phpMyAdmin SUSE Weblate | 0 comments [Less]
Posted about 8 years ago by [email protected] (Michal Čihař)
Weblate 2.13 has been released today pretty much on the schedule. The most important change being more fine grained access control and some smaller UI improvements. There are other new features and bug fixes as well. Full list of changes: Fixed ... [More] quality checks on translation templates. Added quality check to trigger on losing translation. Add option to view pending suggestions from user. Add option to automatically build component lists. Default dashboard for unauthenticated users can be configured. Add option to browse 25 random strings for review. History now indicates string change. Better error reporting when adding new translation. Added per language search within project. Group ACLs can now be limited to certain permissions. The per project ALCs are now implemented using Group ACL. Added more fine grained privileges control. Various minor UI improvements. If you are upgrading from older version, please follow our upgrading instructions. You can find more information about Weblate on https://weblate.org, the code is hosted on Github. If you are curious how it looks, you can try it out on demo server. You can login there with demo account using demo password or register your own user. Weblate is also being used on https://hosted.weblate.org/ as official translating service for phpMyAdmin, OsmAnd, Aptoide, FreedomBox, Weblate itself and many other projects. Should you be looking for hosting of translations for your project, I'm happy to host them for you or help with setting it up on your infrastructure. Further development of Weblate would not be possible without people providing donations, thanks to everybody who have helped so far! The roadmap for next release is just being prepared, you can influence this by expressing support for individual issues either by comments or by providing bounty for them. Filed under: Debian English Gammu phpMyAdmin SUSE Weblate [Less]
Posted about 8 years ago by [email protected] (Michal Čihař)
Weblate 2.13 has been released today pretty much on the schedule. The most important change being more fine grained access control and some smaller UI improvements. There are other new features and bug fixes as well. Full list of changes: Fixed ... [More] quality checks on translation templates. Added quality check to trigger on losing translation. Add option to view pending suggestions from user. Add option to automatically build component lists. Default dashboard for unauthenticated users can be configured. Add option to browse 25 random strings for review. History now indicates string change. Better error reporting when adding new translation. Added per language search within project. Group ACLs can now be limited to certain permissions. The per project ALCs are now implemented using Group ACL. Added more fine grained privileges control. Various minor UI improvements. If you are upgrading from older version, please follow our upgrading instructions. You can find more information about Weblate on https://weblate.org, the code is hosted on Github. If you are curious how it looks, you can try it out on demo server. You can login there with demo account using demo password or register your own user. Weblate is also being used on https://hosted.weblate.org/ as official translating service for phpMyAdmin, OsmAnd, Aptoide, FreedomBox, Weblate itself and many other projects. Should you be looking for hosting of translations for your project, I'm happy to host them for you or help with setting it up on your infrastructure. Further development of Weblate would not be possible without people providing donations, thanks to everybody who have helped so far! The roadmap for next release is just being prepared, you can influence this by expressing support for individual issues either by comments or by providing bounty for them. Filed under: Debian English Gammu phpMyAdmin SUSE Weblate [Less]
Posted about 8 years ago by [email protected] (Michal Čihař)
Weblate 2.13 has been released today pretty much on the schedule. The most important change being more fine grained access control and some smaller UI improvements. There are other new features and bug fixes as well. Full list of changes: Fixed ... [More] quality checks on translation templates. Added quality check to trigger on losing translation. Add option to view pending suggestions from user. Add option to automatically build component lists. Default dashboard for unauthenticated users can be configured. Add option to browse 25 random strings for review. History now indicates string change. Better error reporting when adding new translation. Added per language search within project. Group ACLs can now be limited to certain permissions. The per project ALCs are now implemented using Group ACL. Added more fine grained privileges control. Various minor UI improvements. If you are upgrading from older version, please follow our upgrading instructions. You can find more information about Weblate on https://weblate.org, the code is hosted on Github. If you are curious how it looks, you can try it out on demo server. You can login there with demo account using demo password or register your own user. Weblate is also being used on https://hosted.weblate.org/ as official translating service for phpMyAdmin, OsmAnd, Aptoide, FreedomBox, Weblate itself and many other projects. Should you be looking for hosting of translations for your project, I'm happy to host them for you or help with setting it up on your infrastructure. Further development of Weblate would not be possible without people providing donations, thanks to everybody who have helped so far! The roadmap for next release is just being prepared, you can influence this by expressing support for individual issues either by comments or by providing bounty for them. Filed under: Debian English Gammu phpMyAdmin SUSE Weblate [Less]
Posted about 8 years ago by [email protected] (Michal Čihař)
Few months ago, I've written about getting coverage information from many platforms into one report. That approach worked, but I've always felt guilty for pushing almost thousand of files to Codecov. This week I finally found time to revisit this ... [More] and make it work better and faster. Actually just uploading these files took about 30 minutes. Together with slow tests execution (which took about 30 minutes as well), we were reaching AppVeyor build time limits and builds did timeout quite often, what is not really nice result. I've started with rewriting the wrapper used to execute OpenCppCoverage. I've originally used Python for that, which is nice, but I thought the overhead must be noticeable. As it is not possible to execute Python script directly from CTest, it was wrapped in simple bat file, adding another overhead. Reimplementing this in C showed that there is indeed overhead, but this is not going to save more time than few minutes. Next obvious step was to look at uploading coverage files as this is really something what should be fast and not take such enormous time. When writing the original post, I've already tried to merge coverage data using OpenCppCoverage, but that showed to be too slow to make it actually work (the testsuite didn't complete in given 60 minutes). I was also looking at existing solutions to merge Cobertura XML files, but I've found nothing working reasonably fast. The problem is that all of these always merge two files at one step, making merging thousand files really slow job as you're constantly generating, parsing and processing the resulting xml file for 1000 times. Also these solutions are probably more generic that what I needed. In the end these files are just simple XML and merging them should not be hard. I was able to quickly write Python script to merge them. It does not support all of the Cobertura attributes, it just merges line based coverage (as this is the only thing which OpenCppCoverage generates), but works pretty fast and reliable. Overall the build time went down from 60 minutes to 35 minutes and I don't see much space to improve besides improving OpenCppCoverage speed, what is really out of scope for me. Actually older version (0.9.5.3) performs way faster than current one (0.9.6), which is 2-3 times slower. Filed under: Debian English Gammu [Less]
Posted about 8 years ago by [email protected] (Michal Čihař)
Few months ago, I've written about getting coverage information from many platforms into one report. That approach worked, but I've always felt guilty for pushing almost thousand of files to Codecov. This week I finally found time to revisit this ... [More] and make it work better and faster. Actually just uploading these files took about 30 minutes. Together with slow tests execution (which took about 30 minutes as well), we were reaching AppVeyor build time limits and builds did timeout quite often, what is not really nice result. I've started with rewriting the wrapper used to execute OpenCppCoverage. I've originally used Python for that, which is nice, but I thought the overhead must be noticeable. As it is not possible to execute Python script directly from CTest, it was wrapped in simple bat file, adding another overhead. Reimplementing this in C showed that there is indeed overhead, but this is not going to save more time than few minutes. Next obvious step was to look at uploading coverage files as this is really something what should be fast and not take such enormous time. When writing the original post, I've already tried to merge coverage data using OpenCppCoverage, but that showed to be too slow to make it actually work (the testsuite didn't complete in given 60 minutes). I was also looking at existing solutions to merge Cobertura XML files, but I've found nothing working reasonably fast. The problem is that all of these always merge two files at one step, making merging thousand files really slow job as you're constantly generating, parsing and processing the resulting xml file for 1000 times. Also these solutions are probably more generic that what I needed. In the end these files are just simple XML and merging them should not be hard. I was able to quickly write Python script to merge them. It does not support all of the Cobertura attributes, it just merges line based coverage (as this is the only thing which OpenCppCoverage generates), but works pretty fast and reliable. Overall the build time went down from 60 minutes to 35 minutes and I don't see much space to improve besides improving OpenCppCoverage speed, what is really out of scope for me. Actually older version (0.9.5.3) performs way faster than current one (0.9.6), which is 2-3 times slower. Filed under: Debian English Gammu [Less]
Posted about 8 years ago by [email protected] (Michal Čihař)
Few months ago, I've written about getting coverage information from many platforms into one report. That approach worked, but I've always felt guilty for pushing almost thousand of files to Codecov. This week I finally found time to revisit this ... [More] and make it work better and faster. Actually just uploading these files took about 30 minutes. Together with slow tests execution (which took about 30 minutes as well), we were reaching AppVeyor build time limits and builds did timeout quite often, what is not really nice result. I've started with rewriting the wrapper used to execute OpenCppCoverage. I've originally used Python for that, which is nice, but I thought the overhead must be noticeable. As it is not possible to execute Python script directly from CTest, it was wrapped in simple bat file, adding another overhead. Reimplementing this in C showed that there is indeed overhead, but this is not going to save more time than few minutes. Next obvious step was to look at uploading coverage files as this is really something what should be fast and not take such enormous time. When writing the original post, I've already tried to merge coverage data using OpenCppCoverage, but that showed to be too slow to make it actually work (the testsuite didn't complete in given 60 minutes). I was also looking at existing solutions to merge Cobertura XML files, but I've found nothing working reasonably fast. The problem is that all of these always merge two files at one step, making merging thousand files really slow job as you're constantly generating, parsing and processing the resulting xml file for 1000 times. Also these solutions are probably more generic that what I needed. In the end these files are just simple XML and merging them should not be hard. I was able to quickly write Python script to merge them. It does not support all of the Cobertura attributes, it just merges line based coverage (as this is the only thing which OpenCppCoverage generates), but works pretty fast and reliable. Overall the build time went down from 60 minutes to 35 minutes and I don't see much space to improve besides improving OpenCppCoverage speed, what is really out of scope for me. Actually older version (0.9.5.3) performs way faster than current one (0.9.6), which is 2-3 times slower. Filed under: Debian English Gammu | 0 comments [Less]
Posted about 8 years ago by [email protected] (Michal Čihař)
Yesterday Gammu 1.38.2 has been released. This is bugfix release fixing for example USSD or MMS decoding in some situations. The Windows binaries are available as well. These are built using AppVeyor and will help bring Windows users back to latest ... [More] versions. Full list of changes and new features can be found on Gammu 1.38.2 release page. Would you like to see more features in Gammu? You an support further Gammu development at Bountysource salt or by direct donation. Filed under: Debian English Gammu [Less]