propogated by copy and paste.
1. Primarily the "empty variable" default assignment, which is mostly
${name}_flags="", but fix a few others as well.
2. Where they are not already documented, add the existence of the _flags
(or other deleted empties) option to the comments, and in some cases add
comments from scratch.
3. Replace things that look like:
prefix=%%PREFIX%%
command=${prefix}/sbin/foo
to just use %%PREFIX%%. In many cases the $prefix variable is only used
once, and in some cases it is not used at all.
4. In a few cases remove ${name}_flags from command_args
5. Remove a long-stale comment about putting the port's rc.d script in
/etc/rc.d (which is no longer necessary).
No PORTREVISION bumps because all of these changes are noops.
1. #266 - Excessive db connects and quits
2. #271 - BUG with connect to postgresql database
3. #272 - Non-UTF characters in a message's body
4. #277 - Fix "INTERNALDATE" calculation in imaputil.c
5. other patches from repository.
- Add SHA256
PR: ports/88277
Submitted by: Mark Starovoytov <mark_sf@kikg.ifmo.ru> (maintainer)
All ports depending on postgresql shall use the USE_PGSQL=yes knob
defined in Mk/bsd.ports.mk. Bumping portrevisions where needed.
PR: 75344
Approved by: portmgr@ (kris), ade & sean (mentors)
Set this universally since it's quite plausible that other 64bit platforms
may need this. Don't bump the port version since it wasn't installable on
the systems that would need the portversion bump.
"DBMail 1.2.8a
June 08, 2004 16:21:55 Posted by: Ilja Booij
A buffer overflow error in DBMail 1.2.x has been discovered and fix. The
buffer overflow causes dbmail-smtp to crash with a segmentation fault
when a line in the email header is bigger than 2048 bytes. All version <
1.2.8a are affected, so please update your DBMail installation."
This update fixes a security bug in the SMTP handling code and adds
some indexes to the PostgreSQL table layout for speed improvements
PR: 58470
Submitted by: maintainer
Approved by: krion (implicit)
(author description)
The DBMAIL package replaces the normal UNIX mailing system.
All emails and users data are stored in a database. You can
create an unlimited number of email accounts, which can be
checked using the POP3 or IMAP protocol. Users can maintain
their own set of email addresses. It is more scalable, more
secure, and faster than traditional mail systems. DBMAIL
uses PostgreSQL or MySQL.
PR: ports/54887
Submitted by: Clement Laforet <sheepkiller@cultdeadsheep.org>