If a port used other USE_GNOME items it was untouched.
The ports that used other USES were fixed by hand.
PR: ports/177081
Reviewed by: bapt
Approved by: portmgr (miwi)
-Update libtool and libltdl to 2.2.6a.
-Remove devel/libtool15 and devel/libltdl15.
-Fix ports build with libtool22/libltdl22.
-Bump ports that depend on libltdl22 due to shared library version change.
-Explain what to do update in the UPDATING.
It has been tested with GNOME2, XFCE4, KDE3, KDE4 and other many wm/desktop
and applications in the runtime.
With help: marcus and kwm
Pointyhat-exp: a few times by pav
Tested by: pgollucci, "Romain Tartière" <romain@blogreen.org>, and
a few MarcusCom CVS users. Also, I might have missed a few.
Repocopy by: marcus
Approved by: portmgr
in bsd.autotools.mk essentially makes this a no-op given that all the
old variables set a USE_AUTOTOOLS_COMPAT variable, which is parsed in
exactly the same way as USE_AUTOTOOLS itself.
Moreover, USE_AUTOTOOLS has already been extensively tested by the GNOME
team -- all GNOME 2.12.x ports use it.
Preliminary documentation can be found at:
http://people.FreeBSD.org/~ade/autotools.txt
which is in the process of being SGMLized before introduction into the
Porters Handbook.
Light blue touch-paper. Run.
The libjit library implements Just-In-Time compilation
functionality. Unlike other JIT's, this one is designed to be
independent of any particular virtual machine bytecode format
or language. The hope is that Free Software projects can get a
leg-up on proprietry VM vendors by using this library rather
than spending large amounts of time writing their own JIT from
scratch.
This JIT is also designed to be portable to multiple
archictures. If you run libjit on a machine for which a native
code generator is not yet available, then libjit will fall back
to interpreting the code. This way, you don't need to write
your own interpreter for your bytecode format if you don't want
to.
PR: ports/66038
Submitted by: michael johnson <ahze@ahze.net>