- update: For submitting non-maintainer updates/changes
- maintainer-update: For submitting maintainer updates/changes
The intent is to make it easier to spot maintainer sactioned or submitted
updates to ports though it might also be useful for userland code that is
maintained by someone that is not a FreeBSD committer.
Submitted by: nbm and many others
specific changes into the original distribution (although sometimes
with a slightly different approach) and to add two commandline
options to send-pr(1):
-c which allows you to specify an address to CC this
PR to
-s allow the severity to be specified on the commandline
PR: 17922
when using the egcs and gcc-devel ports, along with GCC built from stock
public FSF sources. With out this change, FreeBSD will be removed from
the list of systems GCC 3.0 must be evaluated on before release. With
the effort some of us put into getting FreeBSD on this list, we should
not turn this effort into a waste, else we might not be worth fighting
for in the future. (note that Alpha and IA-64 versions of crt{i,n}.S
are needed)
* Switch from our own crt{begin,in} to those created from GCC's crtstuff.c.
This will allow us to switch to DWARF2 exceptions in the future, along with
staying in sync with any future GCC requirements.
* Break out our ELF branding bits into a seperate file. Currently this
is now included by our crt1.c files (since this functionality was part of
our native crtbegin.c). Later crtbrand.o will be merged in the creation
of crti.o.
with Brian's kernel support for i386 debug registers. This makes
watchpoints actually usable for real-life problems. Note: you can
only set watchpoints on 1-, 2- or 4-byte locations, gdb automatically
falls back to [sloooow] software watchpoints when attempting to use
them on variables which don't fit into this category. To circumvent
this, one can use the following hack:
watch *(int *)0x<some address>
David O'Brien is IMHO considering to get this fully integrated into the
official GDB, but as long as we've got the i386/* files sitting around
in our private FreeBSD tree here, the feature can now be tested more
extensively, so i'm committing this for the time being.
This work has been done in order to debug a tix toolkit problem, thus
it has been sponsored by teh Deutsche Post AG.
Reviewed by: bsd (not the operating system, but Brian :-)
ENABLE_SUIDPERL is set to true. When perl is updated to remove the
fork mail code, additional warnings will enable the users to know what
is gonig on and how to correct it. Markm will make those commits as
part of his perl patch integration. suidperl is installed with
execute permissions so that markm's added error messages wil be seen
by the user.
Previously, using -S/--skip, -f/--force, or -t/--batch to skip a patch in
a patchset still registers a failure which causes patch to return a
non-zero exit code. This is particularly undesirable with regards to
ports as there is no way to ignore the non-zero code. (Luckily, we don't
currently have any ports that make use of any of these options.)
The PR (yes, my own) is slightly incorrect: It states that -f does indeed
properly skip patches. It does, but it still sets the failure flag causing
patch to return non-zero.
PR: 19638
Submitted by: kbyanc@posi.net
1) (Biggest) I tried long-and-hard to keep the version number (5.006)
backwards compatible with FreeBSD; I have lost this battle, and
must defer to the Perl convention (5.6.0). Victims include suidperl.
this means that dirs with a name of 5.006 will be replaced with
dirs named 5.6.0 in both /usr/libdata/perl and /usr/local/lib/perl.
2) Errno module is added.
3) Alpha bits extensively tweeked after a Beast-build.
Other commits to follow.
where it is used. c-decl has symbols that conflict with several of the
cc1plus sources.
GNU `ld' was changed in Dec 1999 to be more be compatable with the way that
other linkers work (specifically in the Solaris linker). The 2.9.1 `ld',
did the Wrong Thing in that if a library contained a common symbol that
matched a definition of that symbol in another (already linked in object)
it would also be linked in, even if there was no other reason to do so.
This is wrong. The library should only be linked in if it contains
non-common, non-weak symbols which are needed by previously linked in
objects.
Don't use MANDEPEND. It hasn't had anything to do with dependencies for
5-6 years, but is still being used, mainly in groff/*/Makefile, where it
amounts to just a macro giving the list of generated man pages. Since
all man pages in groff are generated (from .man to .[1-9]), it's simpler
to use the source names ({$MANX}) to give the list.
Fixed some other style bugs.
branch. Although this problem has been reported to the GNU folks,
it's unlikely that any solution they may come up with will involve
the use of mktemp(1).
PR: 16942
Submitted by: Colin Phipps <crp22@cam.ac.uk>
Fixed wrong path to libperl in LDADD in some funky objdir setups.
Use ${dir}/libfoo.a instead of -L${dir} -lfoo for local static libraries
in LDADD so that `make checkdpadd' doesn't report non-errors.
Fixed misformatting of $FreeBSD$.
libraries in LDADD so that `make checkdpadd' doesn't report non-errors.
Fixed some style bugs (the usual ones for DPADD and LDADD, and misformatting
of $FreeBSD$).
fixes the way that third-party apps like apache link in perl .so's
(and previously did not get libperl linked in.)
NOTE - you neeed to recompile all your perl stuff - all the p5-*
por4ts with C code, and things like mod_perl.
in rev.1.44 (the egcs to gcc switch). The problem is that print-rtl.o
is now needed to build some tools, but it wasn't added to the list of
objects which are specially handled because they are prerequisites for
tools."
Submitted by: bde
as is documented in the man page. Retain the older mistaken version
of the flag for backwards compatibility in case anybody is using it.
Add $FreeBSD$ tag as cvs requires it.
PR: gnu/7800
build-tools target and by the actual target. In a cross-building situation
proj.o is both a native object and a cross-object (i.e., for the target
arch) and thus doesn't work. Creating seperate opjects from the same
source file solves this...
This patch may also fix the following issue:
> it looks like -DNOCLEAN doesn't work too well.
> cd /usr/src/gnu/usr.bin/cc/f771; make build-tools
> make: don't know how to make /usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/include/stdarg.h. Stop
This seems caused by wrong dependency information. Dependency
information shouldn't be created for build-tools sources.
Submitted by: marcel
This is a new feature of groff and is a html driver for groff.
From the manual page:
"grohtml translates the output of GNU troff to html."
This is very interesting for people working on documentation.
I smite thee, vile buildworld breakage!
The story is that these were added to beforeinstall improperly. In our
beforeinstall, a full mtree has not been populated. Since the tree is
not populated, we explode from missing directories on doc install. It
should not be done in beforeinstall (includes) anyway.
* Remove "why we need this decl..." comment. The `matcher' variable
is defined in *grepmat.c files in the original distribution, which
we did not import.
It is being re-imported here, to keep our long source change history with
this source continuous.
src/contrib/grep will be deleted some time in the very near future.
If one wishes to anchor the compiler toolchain tree somewhere other than /,
all one needs to do is set "TOOLS_PREFIX" to a different rooting.
Submitted by: marcel (in a different format and reworked by me)
of changing the search dirs. This also removes an used search dir,
removes unneeded redundancy, and a bugus dir we enherited on the i386
by baseing off of svr4.h.
We went from:
install: /usr/libexec/(null)
programs: /usr/libexec/<OBJFORMAT>/:/usr/libexec/:/usr/bin/:/usr/libexec/
libraries: /usr/libdata/gcc/:/usr/libexec/:/usr/ccs/lib/:/usr/lib/
to:
install: /usr/libexec/(null)
programs: /usr/libexec/<OBJFORMAT>/:/usr/libexec/
libraries: /usr/libexec/:/usr/lib/
happened as it was working around problems elsewhere (ie: binutils/ld
not doing the right thing according to the ELF design). libcrypt has
been adjusted to not need the runtime -lmd. It's still not quite right
(ld is supposed to work damnit) but at least it doesn't impact all the
users of libcrypt in Marcel's cross-build model.
The target machine is represented by TARGET_ARCH. MACHINE_ARCH always
represents the host machine. When TARGET_ARCH is not defined, it is
assumed to be equal to MACHINE_ARCH. This means that we're building a
native toolset by default. We're creating cross-compilation tools when
MACHINE_ARCH != TARGET_ARCH.
TARGET_ARCH is defined when building binutils as part of the bootstrap
build and is set to reflect the architecture we're currently cross-
building. With this change binutils is ready for cross-building.
(ie Makefile.PL) from creating makefiles that explicitly use the perl
from the object tree. It breaks cross-building. While I'm here, create
a variable that holds common MakeMaker arguments used by all targets,
and by doing so automaticly fixed a bug.
Approved by: markm
default options for diff. These options are interpreted first and can be
overwritten by explicit command line parameters.
* Add the "-o" option to specify old-traditional output style.
* Add utility functions for env vars obtained from GNU Grep 2.3h.
It is being re-imported here, to keep our long source change history with
this source continuous.
src/contrib/grep will be deleted some time in the very near future.
It is being re-imported here, to keep our long source change history with
this source continuous.
src/contrib/grep will be deleted some time in the very near future.
was lost). Restore original version to try and avoid breaking the build
while David O'brien does a proper set of imports and merges.
Requested by: obrien
anymore as building -CURRENT sources on 3-STABLE was the reason for the
previous revision adding this.
Note that since the GCC Project moved mkstemp.c from GCC's world to
libiberty, we no longer support building -CURRENT sources on non-FreeBSD
boxes unless that box has a very simular libc mix as FreeBSD.
pod files to be converted to and installed as manual pages.
These were probably overlooked in the last minor version number upgrade
to perl5. This change was approved by the perl5 maintainer.
PR: 14649
Submitted by: Andy Farkas <andyf@speednet.com.au>
__FreeBSD_version < 400004.
This allows -STABLE to build -CURRENT sources.
[mkstemps() was added to -current just before the version bump to 400004
(a matter of hours in this case), so the test is as exact as possible.]
Submitted by: marcel
All Makefiles now use MACHINE_ARCH for the target architecture.
Unification is required for cross-building.
Tags added to:
sys/boot/Makefile
sys/boot/arc/loader/Makefile
sys/kern/Makefile
usr.bin/cpp/Makefile
usr.bin/gcore/Makefile
usr.bin/truss/Makefile
usr.bin/gcore/Makefile:
fixed typo: MACHINDE -> MACHINE_ARCH
executing apropos or whatis. This prevents `man -k ';echo foo'` from
executing `echo foo` and causes apropos to print an error message instead.
Add $FreeBSD$ while I am here.
Noticed by: chris
tidy up the logic that works out which sub-directories to build.
The new directories with freebsdelf suffixes now have freebsd suffixes
after a repo move by Peter at the request of David O'Brien.
directory to /usr/cross/${MACHINE_ARCH}-freebsdelf/usr/lib so that
the cross tools behave the same way that the host versions do. When
building cross tools, Cygnus doesn't set the default library directory.
This doesn't suit FreeBSD IMHO.
Add WinNT emulation support too. You only get this if you've set
BINUTILSDISTDIR because the contrib/binutils repository doesn't
contain the required sources.
directory to /usr/cross/${MACHINE_ARCH}-freebsdelf/usr/lib so that
the cross tools behave the same way that the host versions do. When
building cross tools, Cygnus doesn't set the default library directory.
This doesn't suit FreeBSD IMHO.
gas for i386 targeted to NT for those (like me) who have to do work
targeted to NT, but can't stand actually looking at it all day long.
I cross build apps on FreeBSD and just run them on NT later. Life is
better that way.
Allow for the case where the host architecture might also be listed
in CROSS_ARCH, so don't do things twice. This situation can arise if you
want NT support in binutils (CROSS_ARCH=i386 CROSS_FORMAT=winnt).
When I imported EGCS into contrib/egcs/ I failed to prune out
egcs/gcc/cp/hash.h which is generated from gxx.gperf. Thus `cc1plus' wasn't
using the hash.h we generated by cc/cc_tools/Makefile, but rather the one in
egcs/gcc/cp/.
When I imported contrib/gcc/ I did prune gcc/cp/hash.h. Unfortunately the
GCC maintainers weren't smart on their file nameing and there is also a
egcs/gcc/hash.h (name overloading does NOT work as well on the filesystem
as in C++...). Due to the -I ordering we are were then picking up gcc/hash.h
when compiling `cc1plus'.
${LIB} was wrong at dependency-parsing time, so dependencies for
libgcc_r*.a were wrong. This somehow worked right, except libgcc_r*.a
were always out of date.
-----------------------------
Most of the userland changes are in libc. For both the alpha
and the i386 setjmp has been changed to accomodate for the
new sigset_t. Internally, libc is mostly rewritten to use the
new syscalls. The exception is in compat-43/sigcompat.c
The POSIX thread library has also been rewritten to use the
new sigset_t. Except, that it currently only handles NSIG
signals instead of the maximum _SIG_MAXSIG. This should not
be a problem because current applications don't use any
signals higher than NSIG.
There are version bumps for the following libraries:
libdialog
libreadline
libc
libc_r
libedit
libftpio
libss
These libraries either a) have one of the modified structures
visible in the interface, or b) use sigset_t internally and
may cause breakage if new binaries are used against libraries
that don't have the sigset_t change. This not an immediate
issue, but will be as soon as applications start using the
new range to its fullest.
NOTE: libncurses already had an version bump and has not been
given one now.
NOTE: doscmd is a real casualty and has been disconnected for
the moment. Reconnection will eventually happen after
doscmd has been fixed. I'm aware that being the last one
to touch it, I'm automaticly promoted to being maintainer.
According to good taste this means that I will receive a
badge which either will be glued or mechanically stapled,
drilled or otherwise violently forced onto me :-)
NOTE: pcvt/vttest cannot be compiled with -traditional. The
change cause sys/types to be included along the way which
contains the const and volatile modifiers. I don't consider
this a solution, but more a workaround.
except an absence of the directory is not considered an error
and doesn't produce a warning).
Put /usr/local/lib/perl5/*/man under OPTIONAL_MANPATH.
- An order of directives in manpath.config is now irrelevant.
- Get rid of infinite loop when PATH is unset or NULL, and
MANDATORY_MANPATH directory doesn't exist.
- mdoc(9)ify manpage.
Reviewed by: des, markm, sheldonh
Configuration header inclusion has been moved around to reduce diffs from
the offical GCC distribution. We now generate the same ``tm.h'' produced by
gcc's `configure' script [minus all the "#ifdef IN_GCC"'s].
Jeff Law of EGCS/Cygus says the new "approved" way of doing configure-related
includes is to list them all in ``tm.h'' rather than having the architure
config headers include large numbers of other configure headers.
- Sort xrefs
- Be consistent with section names as outlined in mdoc(7).
- Other misc mdoc cleanup.
PR: doc/13144
Submitted by: Alexey M. Zelkin <phantom@cris.net>
representation by generating the same format as tar-1.13 (use a single
space as the terminator for 7-digit octal numbers). This is POSIX.1
conformant (2-byte terminators are just a bug or historical wart in
old versions of gnu tar). All devices created by `MAKEDEV all' except
rsa0.ctl can now be handled by tar(1).
was installed in /usr/bin normally got clobbered when objformat
was installed. Indirection through objformat is correct although
underscore handling is the only thing that differs for aout and
elf -- going through objformat is the easiest way to set c++filt's
underscore handling flag correctly.