We have not checked for this KEYWORD for a long time now, so this
is a complete noop, and thus no PORTREVISION bump. Removing it at
this point is mostly for pedantic reasons, and partly to avoid
perpetuating this anachronism by copy and paste to future scripts.
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.
- Drop 4.x support because new version requires wscanf(), vswprintf() and so on
and tarballs of older versions are no longer available
- Fix build when howl installed [1]
- Remove USE_LIBLTDL which is no-op for this port [2]
- Do not build with postgresql, odbc, mysql or sqlite support
Reported by: vs [1], [2]
Begin autotools sanitization sequence by requiring ports to explicitly
specify which version of {libtool,autoconf,automake} they need, erasing
the concept of a "system default".
For ports-in-waiting:
USE_LIBTOOL=YES -> USE_LIBTOOL_VER=13
USE_AUTOCONF=YES -> USE_AUTOCONF_VER=213
USE_AUTOMAKE=YES -> USE_AUTOMAKE_VER=14
Ports attempting to use the old style system after June 1st 2004 will be
sorely disappointed.
CVSNT is a CVS clone. CVSNT features are:
* Merge tracking via MergePoint attribute.
* Support for :sspi: and :sserver: authentication.
* Branch ACLs can be used to restrict access.
* Directory browsing via cvs ls command.
* LockServer on a second port replaces filesystem-based locks &
provides file level locking.
* More sophisticated / extra triggers available e.g. postcommit.
* Supports Unicode files with additional keyword expansion switches.
* Atomic Checkout behaviour ensures you get the right version of every file.
* Efficient storage of binary files using binary deltas.