Source: tntnet
Section: httpd
Priority: optional
Maintainer: Thorsten Alteholz <debian@alteholz.de>
Build-Depends: dpkg-dev (>= 1.22.5), debhelper-compat (= 13)
	, libcxxtools-dev (>= 2.2.1-2)
	, libltdl-dev
	, zip
	, pkg-config
	, libtool
	, libssl-dev
	, zlib1g-dev
	, go-md2man
	, libtntdb-dev
Standards-Version: 4.7.0
Homepage: http://www.tntnet.org/
Rules-Requires-Root: no
Vcs-Browser: https://salsa.debian.org/alteholz/tntnet
Vcs-Git: https://salsa.debian.org/alteholz/tntnet.git

Package: tntnet
Architecture: any
Depends: ${shlibs:Depends}, ${misc:Depends}, net-tools, tntnet-runtime (= ${binary:Version})
Pre-Depends: ${misc:Pre-Depends}
Provides: httpd, httpd-cgi
Suggests: tntnet-doc, libtntnet-dev
Description: modular, multithreaded web application server for C++
 Tntnet has a template-language called ecpp similar to PHP, JSP or
 Mason, where you can embed c++ code inside a HTML page to generate
 active content. The ecpp files are precompiled to C++ classes called
 components and compiled and linked into a shared library. This process
 is done at compiletime. The web server Tntnet needs only the compiled
 component library.
 .
 Because the web applications are compiled into native code, they are
 very fast and compact.
 .
 Components can call other components. So you can create building blocks
 of HTML parts and call them in other pages like subprocesses.
 .
 Requests are parsed by tntnet and the request information is easily
 accessible to the components. It supports GET and POST parameters and
 MIME multipart requests for file upload.
 .
 The template language has also support for internationalized
 applications. You can easily create web applications for different
 languages.
 .
 Other features are: cookies, HTTP upload, automatic request parameter
 parsing and conversion, automatic session management, scoped variables
 (application, request and session), internationalisation and keep-alive.
 .
 Logging is done through cxxtools, which provides a unique API for
 log4cpp, log4cxx or simple logging to files or console.
 .
 Tntnet is fully multithreaded and much work has been gone into making
 it scalable. It uses a dynamic pool of worker threads, which answer
 requests from HTTP clients.
 .
 This package contains the server.

Package: tntnet-doc
Architecture: all
Section: doc
Depends: ${shlibs:Depends}, ${misc:Depends}
Suggests: tntnet-demos
Description: documentation for Tntnet
 Tntnet has a template-language called ecpp similar to PHP, JSP or
 Mason, where you can embed c++ code inside a HTML page to generate
 active content. The ecpp files are precompiled to C++ classes called
 components and compiled and linked into a shared library. This process
 is done at compiletime. The web server Tntnet needs only the compiled
 component library.
 .
 Because the web applications are compiled into native code, they are
 very fast and compact.
 .
 Components can call other components. So you can create building blocks
 of HTML parts and call them in other pages like subprocesses.
 .
 Requests are parsed by tntnet and the request information is easily
 accessible to the components. It supports GET and POST parameters and
 MIME multipart requests for file upload.
 .
 The template language has also support for internationalized
 applications. You can easily create web applications for different
 languages.
 .
 Other features are: cookies, HTTP upload, automatic request parameter
 parsing and conversion, automatic session management, scoped variables
 (application, request and session), internationalisation and keep-alive.
 .
 Logging is done through cxxtools, which provides a unique API for
 log4cpp, log4cxx or simple logging to files or console.
 .
 Tntnet is fully multithreaded and much work has been gone into making
 it scalable. It uses a dynamic pool of worker threads, which answer
 requests from HTTP clients.
 .
 This package contains documentation.

Package: tntnet-demos
Architecture: any
Section: doc
Depends: ${shlibs:Depends}, ${misc:Depends}, libjs-jquery
Recommends: tntnet
Description: demo web applications for Tntnet
 Tntnet has a template-language called ecpp similar to PHP, JSP or
 Mason, where you can embed c++ code inside a HTML page to generate
 active content. The ecpp files are precompiled to C++ classes called
 components and compiled and linked into a shared library. This process
 is done at compiletime. The web server Tntnet needs only the compiled
 component library.
 .
 Because the web applications are compiled into native code, they are
 very fast and compact.
 .
 Components can call other components. So you can create building blocks
 of HTML parts and call them in other pages like subprocesses.
 .
 Requests are parsed by tntnet and the request information is easily
 accessible to the components. It supports GET and POST parameters and
 MIME multipart requests for file upload.
 .
 The template language has also support for internationalized
 applications. You can easily create web applications for different
 languages.
 .
 Other features are: cookies, HTTP upload, automatic request parameter
 parsing and conversion, automatic session management, scoped variables
 (application, request and session), internationalisation and keep-alive.
 .
 Logging is done through cxxtools, which provides a unique API for
 log4cpp, log4cxx or simple logging to files or console.
 .
 Tntnet is fully multithreaded and much work has been gone into making
 it scalable. It uses a dynamic pool of worker threads, which answer
 requests from HTTP clients.
 .
 This package contains a web application demo.

Package: libtntnet13t64
Provides: ${t64:Provides}
Architecture: any
Section: libs
Depends: ${shlibs:Depends}, ${misc:Depends}
Recommends: tntnet-runtime
Breaks: libtntnet13 (<< ${source:Version}), libtntnet12
Replaces: libtntnet13, libtntnet12
Description: Tntnet libraries
 Tntnet has a template-language called ecpp similar to PHP, JSP or
 Mason, where you can embed c++ code inside a HTML page to generate
 active content. The ecpp files are precompiled to C++ classes called
 components and compiled and linked into a shared library. This process
 is done at compiletime. The web server Tntnet needs only the compiled
 component library.
 .
 Because the web applications are compiled into native code, they are
 very fast and compact.
 .
 Components can call other components. So you can create building blocks
 of HTML parts and call them in other pages like subprocesses.
 .
 Requests are parsed by tntnet and the request information is easily
 accessible to the components. It supports GET and POST parameters and
 MIME multipart requests for file upload.
 .
 The template language has also support for internationalized
 applications. You can easily create web applications for different
 languages.
 .
 Other features are: cookies, HTTP upload, automatic request parameter
 parsing and conversion, automatic session management, scoped variables
 (application, request and session), internationalisation and keep-alive.
 .
 Logging is done through cxxtools, which provides a unique API for
 log4cpp, log4cxx or simple logging to files or console.
 .
 Tntnet is fully multithreaded and much work has been gone into making
 it scalable. It uses a dynamic pool of worker threads, which answer
 requests from HTTP clients.
 .
 Thos package contains the library.

Package: libtntnet-dev
Architecture: any
Section: libdevel
Depends: ${shlibs:Depends}, ${misc:Depends}, libcxxtools-dev, libtntnet13t64 (= ${binary:Version})
Description: Tntnet library development headers
 Tntnet has a template-language called ecpp similar to PHP, JSP or
 Mason, where you can embed c++ code inside a HTML page to generate
 active content. The ecpp files are precompiled to C++ classes called
 components and compiled and linked into a shared library. This process
 is done at compiletime. The web server Tntnet needs only the compiled
 component library.
 .
 Because the web applications are compiled into native code, they are
 very fast and compact.
 .
 Components can call other components. So you can create building blocks
 of HTML parts and call them in other pages like subprocesses.
 .
 Requests are parsed by tntnet and the request information is easily
 accessible to the components. It supports GET and POST parameters and
 MIME multipart requests for file upload.
 .
 The template language has also support for internationalized
 applications. You can easily create web applications for different
 languages.
 .
 Other features are: cookies, HTTP upload, automatic request parameter
 parsing and conversion, automatic session management, scoped variables
 (application, request and session), internationalisation and keep-alive.
 .
 Logging is done through cxxtools, which provides a unique API for
 log4cpp, log4cxx or simple logging to files or console.
 .
 Tntnet is fully multithreaded and much work has been gone into making
 it scalable. It uses a dynamic pool of worker threads, which answer
 requests from HTTP clients.
 .
 This package contains files for development.

Package: tntnet-runtime
Architecture: any
Depends: ${shlibs:Depends}, ${misc:Depends}
Description: Tntnet runtime system
 Tntnet has a template-language called ecpp similar to PHP, JSP or
 Mason, where you can embed c++ code inside a HTML page to generate
 active content. The ecpp files are precompiled to C++ classes called
 components and compiled and linked into a shared library. This process
 is done at compiletime. The web server Tntnet needs only the compiled
 component library.
 .
 This package has the runtime system for tntnet web server.
