means (change PREFIX to ${X11BASE}) and add a new variable USE_X11
which means "this port requires the X window system (actually the
library)". USE_X_PREFIX implies USE_X11. USE_X11 adds a
LIB_DEPENDS to libX11 with the x11/XFree86 port.
Reviewed by: the ports list, hoek in particular
(2) Remove NO_CONFIGURE and NO_PATCH, which never meant anything.
Yell if they are defined.
Reviewed by: the ports list
(3) Add new variable OSREL, which is automatically set to the
numeric OS version (e.g., 2.2.1, 3.0). It can be used to refer to
files in gcc installations, for instance.
(4) Finally remove EXEC_DEPENDS hack after all these years.
Submitted by: hoek
(5) Put quotes around some echo ${*_DEPENDS} statements so they won't
blow up when the variables include regular expressions like
"qt\\.1\\.\\\(33\\\|40\\\):${PORTSDIR}/x11/qt140".
consider it a exit failure if it doesn't work. This means that root
processes can safely get the lock, but normal processes can still use
the 'pw' utility to get information (which may change out from under
them.)
from PR/6787, but allow non-root users to use pw to get password
information. However, this should be safe since the fixes for
disallowing multiple instances from modifying the DB are still intact.
Bug noted by: dima@best.net (Dima Ruban)
for building and installing a local sendmail.cf..
I'm a little nervous about the implications of having an obj dir built
under etc (to get to the obj dir for sendmail), but the make rules appear
to DTRT.
This needs to be revisited - we need a simple way of building/installing
these at runtime from the installed system's /etc/mail directory.
freebsd.mc,v and freefall.mc,v have been repository copied here.
in the behavior via the previously default #define DONT_FSYNC, use the
-s flag to turn the fsync() behavior on. This can be configured in
sendmail.cf without recompiling mail.local.
support, which need a final "\n". I only observed one line of
mangled output, but I think there is another one which suffers
from the same problem, and thus I provide a patch that covers
both.
PR: 7483
Reviewed by: phk
Submitted by: Stefan Esser <se@FreeBSD.org>
interrupts which now defers them until the transmit queue if filled
up with completed buffers. This has two advantages: first, it reduces
the number of transmitter interrupts to just 1/120th of the rate
that they occured previously, and two, running down many buffers
at once has much improved cache effects.