listpkgs -- a utility script for syspkg maintainers. Given a pkgset name,
list all packages in that pkgset by parsing the src/distrib
set list files. Imported at draga.com revision 1.2.
Usage: ./listpkgs [-a arch] [-m machine] [-s setsdir] [-p prefix] setname
-a arch set arch (e.g, m68k, mips, powerpc)
-m machine set machine (e.g, amiga, i386, macppc)
-s setsdir directory to find sets
setname set to list packages for
makeplist -- a script called by <bsd.syspkg.mk>. Given a pkgset name
and a pkg name, output a valid PLIST for that package by
parsing the src/distrib set list files. Imported at
draga.com revision 1.2.
Usage: ./makeplist [-a arch] [-m machine] [-s setsdir] [-p prefix] setname pkgname
-a arch set arch (e.g, m68k, mips, powerpc)
-m machine set machine (e.g, amiga, i386, macppc)
-s setsdir directory to find sets
-p prefix prefix for created plist
setname pkgname set and package to build plist for
* Regen files with proper OS names and version numbers.
* Clean up toolchain2netbsd somewhat, to get it ready to be cross-host
compatible (more work to be done here, but it's getting closer).
* Add framework for gdbreplay and gdbserver, but hold off on enabling these
by default until low-nbsd.c is verified to work everywhere.
address parts of PR toolchain/14896. This header file is nonstandard
(and doesn't even exist in gcc 3.0); an out-of-the-box gcc build also
doesn't provide the missing functions. So just drop the .h completely.
Don't error out if DESTDIR exists.
Use "find -s" instead of "find | sort"
While here: Drop syssrc/usr.sbin/dbsym from syssrc.tgz, since it has been
replaced by gnusrc/gnu/usr.sbin/dbsym.
XXX: Add gnusrc/gnu/usr.sbin/dbsym (and libbfd)?
When doing a UDP NFS mount, ask if "small transfers" (i.e.,
-r 1024 -w 1024) should be used; this is necessary when
the client and/or server has a feeble network card.
1. Replace all "groff"'s with $GROFF so the right binary is picked up depending
on new or old toolchain setups and USETOOLS
2. Remove the DESTDIR check where it adds -M. This is pointless as some of the
file in share/tmac have hard coded references to /usr/share/tmac so using the
new ones in $DESTDIR will just point you back into /usr/share anyways...
(the new toolchain has no issue here as it's tmac files all point into
$TOOLDIR. Any old setups should just depend on the local setup instead of
some mix of DESTDIR and old files the -M would have produced).