don't use unsigned long where 32bit unsigned variable is asked for.
use u_int32_t. (not sure if uint32_t is better or not, but anyway,
u_int32_t <-> uint32_t should not raise binary compatibility issue)
PR10921.
TODO: have arch-dependent Makefiles where we supply -DFOO for optimization.
(do not change size of variable though)
XXX: we should actually nuke all other #ifdef in /usr/include/openssl/*.h,
however, that needs a lot of work and will make future openssl upgrade harder.
remove RC5 and IDEA by default. build them separately as
libcrypto_{rc5,idea}.a. put dummy function, which is "warning to stderr
and exit(1)". NOCRYPTO_{RC5,IDEA} are obsoleted.
PR10883.
overrideable in mk.conf
Document in bsd.README; this is distinct from "MKOBJ", which controls
whether "make obj" does anything.
In the top-level makefile, if MKOBJDIRS != "no", do a "make obj" at an
appropriate point during a "make build".
and build shared objects from the .a library. A symlink is installed
in /usr/lib so that the name "libfoo_pic.a" still exists for third party
software that explicitly wants an _pic.a library.
MKPROFILE MKSHARE, which default to `yes' unless an equivalent NOxxx
variable is defined.
* Add MKCATPAGES, which if "no" prevents catpages from being built or installed
Users should use "MKxxx=no" instead of "NOxxx=" in /etc/mk.conf, because
this allows easy override on the make(1) command line (e.g 'make MKSHARE=yes'
to override MKSHARE=no in /etc/mk.conf).
* new bsd.own.mk variable OBJECT_FMT with values "a.out" or "ELF".
* use OBJECT_FMT in Makefile tests that depend on toolchain.
* Add new bsd.own.mk variable NOSHLIB that, if set indicates a given
port doesnt yet do shared libraries. Set on powerpc.
* Document new feature-test variables in src/share/mk/bsd.README.
Tested on i386, mips, fakedup Alpha environment.
and libs in the object tree, if you use a separate object tree,
while maintaining backward compatability with other build methods.
See the notes in src/share/mk/bsd.README for full details. Note
that the `make includes' target now only installs the include files
in the build directory (if you use one--otherwise they go in DESTDIR
just like before); `make install' will install include files in
DESTDIR.