- USE_LINUX now implies NO_FILTER_SHLIBS=yes. It also doesn't use FreeBSD
tools to strip binaries anymore, so it's not neccesary anymore to override
STRIP and STRIP_CMD.
- USE_LINUX_PREFIX implies NO_MTREE now.
- In the USE_LINUX case, USE_XLIB now depends upon the linux X11 libraries
instead upon the native FreeBSD libraries.
- The variable LINUX_BASE_PORT contains a string which is suitable as an
item in *_DEPENDS, so if a port BATCH_DEPENDS or FETCH_DEPENDS upon the
default (or overriden) linux base, ${LINUX_BASE_PORT} should be used
instead of a hardcoded reference.
- Change all ports to comply to the "new world order".
- The Ports Collection now allows to override the default linux_base port.
Specify e.g. OVERRIDE_LINUX_BASE_PORT=rh-9 in /etc/make.conf to use
${PORTSDIR}/emulators/linux_base-rh-9 (the logic is to use
${PORTSDIR}/emulators/linux_base-${OVERRIDE_LINUX_BASE_PORT}).
- If USE_LINUX or OVERRIDE_LINUX_BASE doesn't point to an existing linux_base
port and if USE_LINUX isn't set to "yes" (case insensitive), the port will
be marked as IGNORE. [1]
- Readd USE_LINUX knobs into several ports and make several uses of a
conditional dependency ("USE_LINUX?=") into an unconditional one
("USE_LINUX=") which where removed/changed by Trevor to allow the use of
alternative linux_base ports. While this is a nice goal, the implementation
resulted in missing dependencies. The OVERRIDE_LINUX_BASE_PORT knob
in this commit is supposed to fix the problem while keeping the feature.
Basicaly this includes a backout of Trevor's commit, to prevent confusion
I mention it here explicitely.
- Use the correct prefix (X11- instead of LOCAL- or LINUX-) for some ports.
Chase dependencies for this.
- Changes to make linux_devtools installable on amd64, remove some stray
device nodes (they don't work on recent OS versions and aren't really
needed).
- Make linux_base-8 PREFIX clean and remove some stray device nodes.
Additionally tell a little bit more about how to setup NIS/YP [2].
- Update the PGSQL dependency in the linux-opengroupware port to a recent
version (the old one isn't available anymore), I don't know if this
works (at least it isn't more broken than before).
- Use PREFIX/usr/share/doc instead of PREFIX/usr/doc in the divx4linux
ports, the former path exists already and gets populated by other
packages too (PREFIX=LINUXPREFIX!).
- Fix some obvious (non-linuxolator) bugs in some linux ports while being
there.
- Bump PORTREVISION where neccesary.
Requested by: portmgr (linimon) [1]
Submittted by: Gerrit Kuehn <gerrit_huehn@gruft.fido.de [2]
Approved by: portmgr (kris, linimon), maintainers (or maintainer timeout)
Tested on: ports cluster (kris)
Reviewed by: silence on emulation@
Superseedes PR: 69997
Maintainer approval from:
chris@chrisburkert.decracauer@cons.org
des
girgen
jamie@bishopston.net
mezz
mi
nivit@users.sf.net
pat
simond@irrelevant.orgriggs@rrr.deUdo.Schweigert@Siemens.com
to genericize this thing -- the HP web site wants to "help" you to
fetch from one specific server. Folks, that's not really the way
load-balancing is supposed to work. In any case, the old URL is dead.
the ECHO macro is set to "echo" by default, but it is set to "true" if
make(1) is invoked with the -s option while ECHO_CMD is always set to
the echo command.
Use command macros where appropriate.
This is hairy as Compaq is now putting out dynamic binary rather than static
ones. This makes my job harder with faking out this Linux compiler.
Submitted by: gallatin
Luckly our `ld' knows the name of our dynamic linker and DTRT.
* Remove the DECpaq shared libs from the standard search dir as linking
with them gives unresolved symbols. Thus we'll use the .a's for now.
* Add the symbols __errno_location, __ieee_get_fp_control, and
__ieee_set_fp_control (mapped to native interfaces) to the static
Compaq Portable Math Library. Thus all symbols are resolved.
This allows `CC=ccc' to build fully native FreeBSD Alpha binaries.
available on the Compaq Tru64 UNIX platform. The compiler produces excellent
optimized code for the Alpha architecture, particularly for floating-point
intensive applications.
I was able to compile simple test programs by:
ccc -c foo.c
cc -o foo foo.o