pyfec: update README and bump version number to 0.9.9-0-STABLE

This commit is contained in:
Zooko O'Whielacronx 2007-04-14 12:02:18 -07:00
parent ee66b02989
commit f9b0ea3416
2 changed files with 11 additions and 11 deletions

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@ -147,8 +147,8 @@ objects (e.g. Python strings) to hold the data that you pass to pyfec.
The filefec.py module which has a utility function for efficiently reading a
file and encoding it piece by piece.
The bin/ directory contains two commandline tools "fec" and "unfec". See
their usage strings for details.
The bin/ directory contains two Unix-style, command-line tools "fec" and
"unfec". See their usage strings for details.
* Dependencies
@ -179,17 +179,17 @@ Thanks to the author of the original fec lib, Luigi Rizzo, and the folks that
contributed to it: Phil Karn, Robert Morelos-Zaragoza, Hari Thirumoorthy, and
Dan Rubenstein. Thanks to the Mnet hackers who wrote an earlier Python
wrapper, especially Myers Carpenter and Hauke Johannknecht. Thanks to Brian
Warner for help with the API, documentation, debugging, and unit tests.
Thanks to the creators of GCC (starting with Richard M. Stallman) and
Valgrind (starting with Julian Seward) for a pair of excellent tools. Thanks
to my coworkers at Allmydata -- http://allmydata.com -- Fabrice Grinda, Peter
Secor, Rob Kinninmont, Brian Warner, Zandr Milewski, Justin Boreta, Mark
Meras for sponsoring this work and releasing it under a Free Software
licence.
Warner and Amber O'Whielacronx for help with the API, documentation,
debugging, compression, and unit tests. Thanks to the creators of GCC
(starting with Richard M. Stallman) and Valgrind (starting with Julian Seward)
for a pair of excellent tools. Thanks to my coworkers at Allmydata --
http://allmydata.com -- Fabrice Grinda, Peter Secor, Rob Kinninmont, Brian
Warner, Zandr Milewski, Justin Boreta, Mark Meras for sponsoring this work and
releasing it under a Free Software licence.
Enjoy!
Zooko Wilcox-O'Hearn
2007-04-11
2007-04-14
Boulder, Colorado

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@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ from util.version import Version
# For an explanation of what the parts of the version string mean,
# please see pyutil.version.
__version__ = Version("0.9.0-0-STABLE")
__version__ = Version("0.9.9-0-STABLE")
# Please put a URL or other note here which shows where to get the branch of
# development from which this version grew.