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* <h3>Runtime Dependencies</h3> dependencies published using <div | * <h3>Runtime Dependencies</h3> dependencies published using <div | ||
class="depbox with links. | class="depbox with links. | ||
* | * >= <a href="/dev-lang/perl">dev-lang/perl</a>-5.6.1 | ||
* the previous behaviour is used for each version of the published software | |||
Lots of semantic html. Could be clues for possibles property names. | |||
== See Also == | |||
* [[rel-tag]] (for language, etc.) | |||
* [[rel-license]] | |||
* [[hcard hCard]] (for authors) | |||
* [[http://usefulinc.com/doap/ DOAP]] (similar in nature) |
Revision as of 14:51, 9 July 2007
depend examples
Overview
This page is dedicated to fleshing out examples of dependency (software and otherwise) on the Web-At-Large.
Authors
Motivation
Right now, there many ways to install software; whether you're using binaries (apt-get, yum, rpm) or source (emerge, srpm, *-src), you have to go through a clearing house. Someone took the time to compile binaries or repackage source trees and write down what needed what.
But the fact is all of this information is already on the homepage for most software. Current aggregators rely on the author(s) submitting this information manually. Furthermore, commercial packages don't normally submit product information to sites like FreshMeat, SourceForge, or any language-specific repository (CPAN, PEAR). (This includes things like drivers.)
Because the information (version, dependency, package URLs, bug alerts) is already there (see below) it should be fairly straight-forward to figure out what people already do and "semantic it up."
Examples
Linux Kernel
- uses <link> to provide RSS feed
- uses word "versions"
- uses links to deliverable with version string as anchor text
- uses a kind of "product/software id" (my made up term) to identify the thing being described
- includes a description of the software
- includes the date published
- uses keywords as anchor text to perform operations or view
- <LINK REV="made" HREF="http://pobox.com/~newt/greg_contact.html">
- libpng name of software in an element
- <A HREF=
- requires zlib 1.0.4
- The current public release, libpng 1.2.15 again, lossy markup
- includes a description of the software
- libpng 1.2.12 another mention of the software in it's own element
- the site contains links to test suites, documentation, and download links
- also includes a description of how to verify the contents
- lots of content about the software, but very little semantic markup.
- uses <link> to an rss feed
- links to other project areas... issue tracking, forums etc...
- branch info published
- date added, created, modified all published
- description
- author
- "trove" categories
- might list dependencies, but there are none for this particular example
- stats listed: vitality, popularity, downloads, graphs...
- hits, subscribers
- other projects depending on this one are listed
- license published
- download links provided
- no semantic markup present.
- <link> and <meta> used to convey authorship, "made", author, and
- interesting, there is some semantic html...
- key value pairs (in a table) for: short description, category,
- uses address to list contact for the document, and other uses of
- <link> to rss feed
- <body id="gentoo-portage"> intended consumer published in markup
- links to other project areas
dev-lang/erlang
product nameused for description
- used to list project websites
- ...
- ... used for consumer-specific parameters
- "view" and "download" links.
Runtime Dependencies
dependencies published using <div
class="depbox with links.
- >= <a href="/dev-lang/perl">dev-lang/perl</a>-5.6.1
- the previous behaviour is used for each version of the published software
Lots of semantic html. Could be clues for possibles property names.
See Also
- rel-tag (for language, etc.)
- rel-license
- hcard hCard (for authors)
- [DOAP] (similar in nature)
additional features. for example, V for view diff, changelog to see the changelog, etc...
libPNG
http://libpng.org/pub/png/libpng.html
Interesting. "made by "his guy" :-) . hcard would seem to be a perfect fit here.
"http://libpng.sourceforge.net/">http://libpng.sourceforge.net/</A> link to homepage
or later (1.2.3 or 1.1.4 lossy markup of requirements
good example: easy to see how some semantic techniques would help. would marking this up using hatom help at all?
libvc
http://freshmeat.net/projects/libvc/
Ruby FastCGI
http://raa.ruby-lang.org/project/fcgi/
some other attributes: search, index, home, glossary
Portage: dev-lang/erlang
http://www.gentoo-portage.com/dev-lang/erlang/Dep#ptabs