git-annex/debian/control
Joey Hess c784ef4586 unify exception handling into Utility.Exception
Removed old extensible-exceptions, only needed for very old ghc.

Made webdav use Utility.Exception, to work after some changes in DAV's
exception handling.

Removed Annex.Exception. Mostly this was trivial, but note that
tryAnnex is replaced with tryNonAsync and catchAnnex replaced with
catchNonAsync. In theory that could be a behavior change, since the former
caught all exceptions, and the latter don't catch async exceptions.

However, in practice, nothing in the Annex monad uses async exceptions.
Grepping for throwTo and killThread only find stuff in the assistant,
which does not seem related.

Command.Add.undo is changed to accept a SomeException, and things
that use it for rollback now catch non-async exceptions, rather than
only IOExceptions.
2014-08-07 22:03:29 -04:00

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Source: git-annex
Section: utils
Priority: optional
Build-Depends:
debhelper (>= 9),
ghc (>= 7.4),
libghc-mtl-dev (>= 2.1.1),
libghc-missingh-dev,
libghc-data-default-dev,
libghc-hslogger-dev,
libghc-pcre-light-dev,
libghc-sha-dev,
libghc-cryptohash-dev,
libghc-dataenc-dev,
libghc-utf8-string-dev,
libghc-hs3-dev (>= 0.5.6),
libghc-dav-dev (>= 0.8) [amd64 i386 kfreebsd-amd64 kfreebsd-i386 powerpc],
libghc-quickcheck2-dev,
libghc-monad-control-dev (>= 0.3),
libghc-exceptions-dev,
libghc-unix-compat-dev,
libghc-dlist-dev,
libghc-uuid-dev,
libghc-json-dev,
libghc-aeson-dev,
libghc-ifelse-dev,
libghc-bloomfilter-dev,
libghc-edit-distance-dev,
libghc-hinotify-dev [linux-any],
libghc-stm-dev (>= 2.3),
libghc-dbus-dev (>= 0.10.3) [linux-any],
libghc-fdo-notify-dev (>= 0.3) [linux-any],
libghc-yesod-dev [i386 amd64 kfreebsd-i386 kfreebsd-amd64 powerpc sparc],
libghc-yesod-static-dev [i386 amd64 kfreebsd-i386 kfreebsd-amd64 powerpc sparc],
libghc-yesod-default-dev [i386 amd64 kfreebsd-amd64 powerpc sparc],
libghc-hamlet-dev [i386 amd64 kfreebsd-i386 kfreebsd-amd64 powerpc sparc],
libghc-shakespeare-dev [i386 amd64 kfreebsd-i386 kfreebsd-amd64 powerpc sparc],
libghc-clientsession-dev [i386 amd64 kfreebsd-i386 kfreebsd-amd64 powerpc sparc],
libghc-warp-dev [i386 amd64 kfreebsd-i386 kfreebsd-amd64 powerpc sparc],
libghc-warp-tls-dev [i386 amd64 kfreebsd-i386 kfreebsd-amd64 powerpc sparc],
libghc-wai-dev [i386 amd64 kfreebsd-i386 kfreebsd-amd64 powerpc sparc],
libghc-wai-extra-dev [i386 amd64 kfreebsd-i386 kfreebsd-amd64 powerpc sparc],
libghc-securemem-dev,
libghc-byteable-dev,
libghc-dns-dev,
libghc-case-insensitive-dev,
libghc-http-types-dev,
libghc-blaze-builder-dev,
libghc-crypto-api-dev,
libghc-network-multicast-dev,
libghc-network-info-dev [linux-any kfreebsd-any],
libghc-safesemaphore-dev,
libghc-network-protocol-xmpp-dev (>= 0.4.3-1+b1),
libghc-gnutls-dev (>= 0.1.4),
libghc-xml-types-dev,
libghc-async-dev,
libghc-http-dev,
libghc-feed-dev (>= 0.3.9.2),
libghc-regex-tdfa-dev [!mipsel !s390],
libghc-regex-compat-dev [mipsel s390],
libghc-tasty-dev (>= 0.7) [!mipsel !sparc],
libghc-tasty-hunit-dev [!mipsel !sparc],
libghc-tasty-quickcheck-dev [!mipsel !sparc],
libghc-tasty-rerun-dev [!mipsel !sparc],
libghc-optparse-applicative-dev [!sparc],
lsof [!kfreebsd-i386 !kfreebsd-amd64],
ikiwiki,
perlmagick,
git (>= 1:1.8.4),
rsync,
wget,
curl,
openssh-client,
git-remote-gcrypt (>= 0.20130908-6),
Maintainer: Joey Hess <joeyh@debian.org>
Standards-Version: 3.9.5
Vcs-Git: git://git.kitenet.net/git-annex
Homepage: http://git-annex.branchable.com/
XS-Testsuite: autopkgtest
Package: git-annex
Architecture: any
Section: utils
Depends: ${misc:Depends}, ${shlibs:Depends},
git (>= 1:1.8.4),
rsync,
wget,
curl,
openssh-client (>= 1:5.6p1)
Recommends:
lsof,
gnupg,
bind9-host,
quvi,
git-remote-gcrypt (>= 0.20130908-6),
nocache,
Suggests:
graphviz,
bup,
tahoe-lafs,
libnss-mdns,
Description: manage files with git, without checking their contents into git
git-annex allows managing files with git, without checking the file
contents into git. While that may seem paradoxical, it is useful when
dealing with files larger than git can currently easily handle, whether due
to limitations in memory, time, or disk space.
.
Even without file content tracking, being able to manage files with git,
move files around and delete files with versioned directory trees, and use
branches and distributed clones, are all very handy reasons to use git. And
annexed files can co-exist in the same git repository with regularly
versioned files, which is convenient for maintaining documents, Makefiles,
etc that are associated with annexed files but that benefit from full
revision control.