re-rolled.
- Move post-patch target into files/patch-xwin.c to remove sed invocation.
- Respect NOPORTDATA and DATADIR.
- Bring files/patch-aa back (to preserve history) and retire patch-makefile.
- Fixup files/patch-xwin.c so it applies cleanly to this version.
Specifically, newer autoconf (> 2.13) has different semantic of the
configure target. In short, one should use --build=CONFIGURE_TARGET
instead of CONFIGURE_TARGET directly. Otherwise, you will get a warning
and the old semantic may be removed in later autoconf releases.
To workaround this issue, many ports hack the CONFIGURE_TARGET variable
so that it contains the ``--build='' prefix.
To solve this issue, under the fact that some ports still have
configure script generated by the old autoconf, we use runtime detection
in the do-configure target so that the proper argument can be used.
Changes to Mk/*:
- Add runtime detection magic in bsd.port.mk
- Remove CONFIGURE_TARGET hack in various bsd.*.mk
- USE_GNOME=gnometarget is now an no-op
Changes to individual ports, other than removing the CONFIGURE_TARGET hack:
= pkg-plist changed (due to the ugly CONFIGURE_TARGET prefix in * executables)
- comms/gnuradio
- science/abinit
- science/elmer-fem
- science/elmer-matc
- science/elmer-meshgen2d
- science/elmerfront
- science/elmerpost
= use x86_64 as ARCH
- devel/g-wrap
= other changes
- print/magicfilter
GNU_CONFIGURE -> HAS_CONFIGURE since it's not generated by autoconf
Total # of ports modified: 1,027
Total # of ports affected: ~7,000 (set GNU_CONFIGURE to yes)
PR: 126524 (obsoletes 52917)
Submitted by: rafan
Tested on: two pointyhat 7-amd64 exp runs (by pav)
Approved by: portmgr (pav)
sequences. It stands for Sequence Search and Alignment by Hashing
Algorithm. It achieves its fast search speed by converting sequence
information into a `hash table' data structure, which can then be
searched very rapidly for matches.
WWW: http://www.sanger.ac.uk/Software/analysis/SSAHA/
PR: ports/124525
Submitted by: Fernan Aguero <fernan@iib.unsam.edu.ar>
Approved by: gabor (mentor, implicit)
The affected ports are the ones with gettext as a run-dependency
according to ports/INDEX-7 (5007 of them) and the ones with USE_GETTEXT
in Makefile (29 of them).
PR: ports/124340
Submitted by: edwin@
Approved by: portmgr (pav)
assembly
Consed is a tool for viewing, editing, and finishing sequence
assemblies.
The port is constituted of 4 parts:
biology/phred: base caller with quality evaluation
biology/phrap: sequence assembler for shotgun sequencing
biology/consed: workbench
biology/phd2fasta: small utility
All these can be used separately; however, most function
of consed depends on the others.
Although these programs are licensed freely for academic
and nonprofit purposes, users have to contact the authors
to get the softwares.
Phred (including phd2fasta) and phrap are emailed,
and consed can be downloaded to a restricted IP address.
For commercial users, the licensing fee is ca. $10,000 at
the time of writing.
PR: ports/118548
Submitted by: Motomichi Matsuzaki <mzaki@biol.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
assembly
Consed is a tool for viewing, editing, and finishing sequence
assemblies.
The port is constituted of 4 parts:
biology/phred: base caller with quality evaluation
biology/phrap: sequence assembler for shotgun sequencing
biology/consed: workbench
biology/phd2fasta: small utility
All these can be used separately; however, most function
of consed depends on the others.
Although these programs are licensed freely for academic
and nonprofit purposes, users have to contact the authors
to get the softwares.
Phred (including phd2fasta) and phrap are emailed,
and consed can be downloaded to a restricted IP address.
For commercial users, the licensing fee is ca. $10,000 at
the time of writing.
PR: ports/118548
Submitted by: Motomichi Matsuzaki <mzaki@biol.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
assembly
Consed is a tool for viewing, editing, and finishing sequence
assemblies.
The port is constituted of 4 parts:
biology/phred: base caller with quality evaluation
biology/phrap: sequence assembler for shotgun sequencing
biology/consed: workbench
biology/phd2fasta: small utility
All these can be used separately; however, most function
of consed depends on the others.
Although these programs are licensed freely for academic
and nonprofit purposes, users have to contact the authors
to get the softwares.
Phred (including phd2fasta) and phrap are emailed,
and consed can be downloaded to a restricted IP address.
For commercial users, the licensing fee is ca. $10,000 at
the time of writing.
PR: ports/118548
Submitted by: Motomichi Matsuzaki <mzaki@biol.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
assembly
Consed is a tool for viewing, editing, and finishing sequence assemblies.
The port is constituted of 4 parts:
biology/phred: base caller with quality evaluation
biology/phrap: sequence assembler for shotgun sequencing
biology/consed: workbench
biology/phd2fasta: small utility
All these can be used separately; however, most function
of consed depends on the others.
Although these programs are licensed freely for academic
and nonprofit purposes, users have to contact the authors
to get the softwares.
Phred (including phd2fasta) and phrap are emailed,
and consed can be downloaded to a restricted IP address.
For commercial users, the licensing fee is ca. $10,000 at
the time of writing.
PR: ports/118548
Submitted by: Motomichi Matsuzaki <mzaki@biol.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
in the Newick phylogenetic tree format (e.g., the format used by the PHYLIP
package). NJplot is especially convenient for rooting the unrooted trees
obtained from parsimony, distance or maximum likelihood tree-building methods.
The package contains the following programs:
njplot - draw phylogenetic trees and interactively modify them
newicktops - non-interactive version rendering into a PostScript file
newicktotxt - non-interactive version rendering into a text file
unrooted - draw unrooted circular trees
If you use NJplot in a published work, please cite the following reference:
Perriere, G. and Gouy, M. (1996) WWW-Query: An on-line retrieval system for
biological sequence banks. Biochimie, 78, 364-369.
WWW: http://pbil.univ-lyon1.fr/software/njplot.html
PR: ports/118438
Submitted by: Motomichi Matsuzaki <mzaki@biol.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp>