commit: f237106d2ec5d9a40c1d239825378996d5fb0ff5 Author: Denis Reva <denis7774 <AT> gmail <DOT> com> AuthorDate: Mon May 3 10:11:15 2021 +0000 Commit: Andrew Ammerlaan <andrewammerlaan <AT> riseup <DOT> net> CommitDate: Mon May 3 10:11:15 2021 +0000 URL: https://gitweb.gentoo.org/repo/proj/guru.git/commit/?id=f237106d
sys-fs/dwarfs: I've temporarily resigned Because I adventure with russian military office. Package-Manager: Portage-3.0.18, Repoman-3.0.2 Signed-off-by: Denis Reva <denis7774 <AT> gmail.com> sys-fs/dwarfs/metadata.xml | 5 ----- 1 file changed, 5 deletions(-) diff --git a/sys-fs/dwarfs/metadata.xml b/sys-fs/dwarfs/metadata.xml index 17e2efa0c..c312e8621 100644 --- a/sys-fs/dwarfs/metadata.xml +++ b/sys-fs/dwarfs/metadata.xml @@ -1,11 +1,6 @@ <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <!DOCTYPE pkgmetadata SYSTEM 'http://www.gentoo.org/dtd/metadata.dtd'> <pkgmetadata> - <maintainer type="person"> - <email>[email protected]</email> - <name>Denis Reva</name> - <description>Partial maintainer</description> - </maintainer> <longdescription lang="en"> DwarFS is a read-only file system with a focus on achieving very high compression ratios in particular for very redundant data. This probably doesn't sound very exciting, because if it's redundant, it should compress well. However, I found that other read-only, compressed file systems don't do a very good job at making use of this redundancy. See here for a comparison with other compressed file systems.
