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freebsd-ports/cad/gmsh/pkg-descr
Joseph Mingrone 230bad2776 Update cad/gmsh to 2.13.2; fix knob issue; other changes
- Upgrade to version 2.13.2
- Update MASTER_SITES to only include new gmsh site
- Remove no-longer-needed definitions of DISTFILES, EXTRACT_ONLY, and WRKSRC
- The licensing situation is simpler now:  Gmsh itself is released under
  GPLv3+ [1], TetGen under AGPLv3+ [2], and METIS under an APACHE2 license [3]
  For now, TAUCS is the only component released under a non-standard license [4]
- Fix misnamed KNOB in KNOB_DESC=, so `make config` shows descriptions
- Fix errors/warnings reported by portlint and poudriere testport
  - Add missing entries to LIB_DEPENDS=
  - Add blaslapack to USES=
  - Change USE_GL=yes to USE_GL=gl glu
  - Add USE_XORG=x11 xext xfixes xft
  - Redo patches with make makepatch
- Remove MAKE_JOBS_UNSAFE=yes
- Remove options for bundled software
- Update default options
- Add patch to fix TAUCS linking error
- Modernize option handling
- Mark broken on FreeBSD 12 i386 due to clang bug:
  (https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=21903)
- Remove unnecessary TAUCS_LIB_DEPENDS=libtaucs.so:math/taucs to prevent
  problems with french/aster
  - cad/gmsh includes a bundled taucs, so
    TAUCS_LIB_DEPENDS=libtaucs.so:math/taucs can be removed
  - math/taucs pulls in math/metis4, but french/aster, which depends on
    cad/gmsh, pulls in conflicting math/taucs-edf
- Update pkg-plist

[1]  http://gmsh.info/#Licensing
[2]  http://wias-berlin.de/software/tetgen/1.5/FAQ-license.html
[3]  http://glaros.dtc.umn.edu/gkhome/metis/metis/faq?q=metis/metis/faq#cite
[4]  http://www.tau.ac.il/~stoledo/taucs/

PR:		212398
Reviewed by:	swills (mentor) AMDmi3 (mentor)
Approved by:	swills (mentor)
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7703
2016-09-29 19:15:34 +00:00

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Gmsh is a free 3D finite element grid generator with a build-in CAD engine and
post-processor. Its design goal is to provide a fast, light and user-friendly
meshing tool with parametric input and advanced visualization capabilities. Gmsh
is built around four modules: geometry, mesh, solver and post-processing. The
specification of any input to these modules is done either interactively using
the graphical user interface or in ASCII text files using Gmsh's own scripting
language.
WWW: http://www.geuz.org/gmsh/