remove it. You will still be able to build your own INDEX or use
'fetchindex' target in /usr/ports/.
The last INDEX song ever.
(sung to the tune of "Imagine" by John Lennon)
Imagine there's no INDEX
It's easy if you try
It was a hard decision
It should now go and die
Imagine all the people
Building INDEX today...
Imagine there's no ports
Is it so hard to do ?
Nothing to break or fix for
And no GNOME too
Imagine all the people
Fetching INDEX today...
You may say I'm a dreamer
But the hacks must go away
I hope someday you won't break it
And let the downloads rule the day
Imagine there's no cluster
I wonder if you can
Two hundreds ports are broken
Please help us, Uncle Sam
Imagine all the people
Loving INDEX today...
You may say I'm a dreamer
But the hacks must go away
I hope someday you won't break it
And let the downloads rule the day
and make XFREE86_VERSION map to it. XFREE86_VERSION is now deprecated.
- Make xorg the default X_WINDOW_SYSTEM on -current.
- Add several new X_*_PORT variables which point to various pieces of X11 based
on the setting of X_WINDOW_SYSTEM, and make ports use them.
- Add information to CHANGES about how to handle the transition.
PR: ports/68763
Approved by: portmgr (marcus)
Approved by: re (scottl)
Heavily inspired by /usr/src/UPDATING, this file is intended
for notes on major changes to ports and infrastructure, that
have a significant impact on other ports. Indended audience
is committers and developers; changes that affect users
should be added to the ports section of the release notes that
I hope to add in the near future. Although I am mentioned as
maintainer, this should not be seen as a lock, everyone is
welcome to add to this file.
Requested by: many
Approved by: marcus (some time ago)
Inspired by: UPDATING (imp)