This will make a number of things easier in the future, as well as (finally!)
avoiding the Id-smashing problem which has plagued developers for so long.
Boy, I'm glad we're not using sup anymore. This update would have been
insane otherwise.
the original logic went into a section of code assuming some
incarnation is there, but it's basically a "test -d" fix. Closes PR
ports/2082.
Reviewed by: max ("although I didn't test it, it looks fine")
Submitted by: Jason Thorpe <thorpej@nas.nasa.gov>
(2) Remove the bogus "CAT+=" definition. Closes PR ports/1703.
Submitted by: Peter Childs <pjchilds@imforei.apana.org.au>
(3) Change MKDIR to "/bin/mkdir -p", remove "-p" from ${MKDIR}
invocations. Closes PR ports/1901.
Submitted by: obrien
(4) Add a new macro variable COMPRESS_MAN, which will evaluate to gzip
if NOMANCOMPRESS isn't set (default), or true if it is.
(5) Add a new variable NO_CHECKSUM, which will disable the md5 checksum.
Submitted by: jkh
(6) Also, move NO_PATCH and NO_PACKAGE checks to right place in
invocation order.
(7) Check for LIB_DEPENDS before installation too. (It used to check
only before extraction.)
Forgotten a long time ago by: asami
word: "zilch"). I guess the only way to get people try and comment on
these kind of things is to shove it down their throat.... ;)
Anyway, here's a set of changes required for auto-generation of READMEs
in ports directories. Necessary changes and additions of templates
to the ports tree will follow shortly.
Eventually I'll commit all the generated READMEs to the tree, but that
will be in the rather distant future. For now, I encourage anyone
with a -current systam and a matching ports tree to do a "make readmes"
at the top level and see what they get.
Next step will be to add pkg/{COMMENT,DESCR} to all the categories.
special ports building targets and will recurse properly. Sorry,
Julian E - no fancy prompts, just recursion! :-)
Added a `bundle' target. Purpose is as follows:
You want to give someone a complete tree sans distfiles (for
sticking on CDROM perhaps?) but the difficulty there is that
the first time the user types `make clean', all the unpacked
sources are gone again. Typing `make bundle' recreates the
original distfile if it can, so someone can "back up" their
unpacked tree easily with one command.
Whoops, just thought of something - it should warn if you
configured the working source.
Ok, next commit! :)
Submitted by: jkh