Re: eza

2023-10-22 Thread lauf3y
> It really looks like eza is exa with a few changes on top. Yes, eza is a maintained fork of exa. The main author of exa (ogham) just vanished in Oct 2021 and didn't committed to exa since. It's why eza exists. Since then, there are no real big changes that have been made apart from some

Re: eza

2023-10-22 Thread Theo Buehler
On Tue, Oct 10, 2023 at 12:45:03PM +0100, Stuart Henderson wrote: > On 2023/10/09 22:03, lauf3y wrote: > > Hello, > > > > I would like to publish a port of a software named eza. > > eza is a modern, maintained replacement for ls, built on exa. > > It's written in Rust, is fairly new and well

Re: eza

2023-10-22 Thread Volker Schlecht
Attached is sthen@'s original port updated to 0.15.0, and with me volunteering to maintain it. I can't help it, I like the colours :-D I'd be in favor of removing exa and replacing it with eza, too. ok to import? On Tue Oct 17, 2023 at 10:49 PM CEST, lauf3y wrote: > Does any developer with CVS

Re: eza

2023-10-21 Thread lauf3y
Does any developer with CVS access can/want to publish it ? I personally don't have the rights to publish it, but I would be happy to publish it and maintain it if I can/need to. Congrats for OpenBSD 7.4 btw! lauf3y --- Original Message --- On Tuesday, October 10th, 2023 at 11:45 AM,

Re: eza

2023-10-10 Thread Stuart Henderson
On 2023/10/09 22:03, lauf3y wrote: > Hello, > > I would like to publish a port of a software named eza. > eza is a modern, maintained replacement for ls, built on exa. > It's written in Rust, is fairly new and well maintained. It's a fork of exa, > which was a very popular replacement of ls. But