* Replace chdir_verify_path() with Main_SetObjdir(), which can be called
externally, and can take a "const char *". (There's a lot of non-const
"char *" passing around in var.c of what should be const strings....)
* Rewrite the initial "find my .OBJDIR" code to make use of the new
function. This still functions as it had in the past, but the comment
above this block was changed to reflect reality: if MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX
or MAKEOBJDIR are set in the environment, then *only that value* is
tried; make does not fall back to obj.MACHINE, obj, and /usr/obj/`pwd`
as it would without these env vars set.
* Add a new special target, .OBJDIR:, which when parsed will cause make to
change to a new object directory and reset .OBJDIR, and PWD in the
environment. This will allow some makefiles (mainly, src/tools)
to override the default objdir semantics in order to add custom logic.
(This splits out the "default system include paths" into its own Lst
variable, and uses it only if sysIncPath is empty. This allows sysIncPath
to be filled in by the Makefile itself.)
aren't going to do anything with the information anyway and there is
error checking later anyway.
We can now succeed in creating symlinks to locations that don't exist,
just as ln -s will let us do, and we can use install instead of ln -s
in several Makefiles. The code was written with the obvious intent to
let you do this but apparently it was never tested.
pull the correct one in based on the MACHINE_CPU variable.
MACHINE_CPU will be set according to the target system we are
building for by <bsd.own.mk>.
One component of addressing bin/14280.
by defining the (newer) CUT_LINE_TO_EOL define in common/cut.h and using it
where due.
Bug reported on current-users by Masanori Kanaoka <kanaoka@ann.hi-ho.ne.jp>
diagnosed by Bang Jun-Young <bjy@mogua.org>,
quick-fixed by Robert Elz <kre@munnari.OZ.AU>.
/etc/passwd and /etc/group (as well as concept of file flags) as the target.
Rather than look up users, groups, or flags with -U, do what the manpage
indicates: don't even try changing them. If -M is specified, use the
strings that are passed in via options with "gname", "uname", and "flags"
in the resultant mtree file, rather than retranslating them back from numbers.
make sure that the dir actually exists. In compat mode the corresponding
chdir simply fails and all is well - the issue only arises when playing
tricky games with the value of .CURDIR.
Reviewed: christos