characters escaped with a backslash, but recognise the backslashes for
backwards compatibility. When matching names, do any escaping of
the regexp '.' metacharacter automatically, if needed.
When a shared object dependency is printed out, use a form that does
not have the backslashes in it, for readability.
Print out the full pathname of the matching shared object, for clarity.
to "no" in a package's Makefile when the authors have placed
restrictions on the redistribution of the distfiles. (Thanks to Jason
Thorpe for the idea).
Add a `mirror' target, which will do a "make fetch" if the package's
distfile is allowed to be redistributed. This is for use on sites
which mirror package distfiles. (Thanks to Charles Hannum for the
idea).
- Document NO_IGNORE, __ARCH_OK
- Make __ARCH_OK overridable, so it can be set to YES e.g. for fetching
all distfiles.
- Move ".ifndef(__ARCH_OK): block, so some targets like clean work
in any case.
- Add LOCALBASE and X11BASE to PATH in MAKE_ENV, CONFIGURE_ENV and
SCRIPT_ENV; this fixes PR 4573
bsd.port.mk, but this time use a definition before the inclusion,
which stops <bsd.own.mk> defining its own install target when
using the package system.
This makes the package system take notice of the definitions in
/etc/mk.conf
one if the categories directories, will call "make readme" in
any subdirectories.
I thought that this was suggested by Chris Demetriou, but I can't find
any PR backing this up. So my apologies to the person who did suggest
this.
characters, and avoids the wrong interpretation of magic HTML
characters in DESCR files or categories.
Forwarded to me by Chris Demetriou, and refers to PR 4341.
- Fixup documentation for CAT<sect>, CATPREFIX.
(these two changes were accidentally committed to the 1.3 branch
as revisions 1.13.2.3 and 1.13.2.4 before!)
+ set MAKE_PROGRAM variable in bsd.port.mk to either ${GMAKE} or
${MAKE}, and use it in do-build and do-install targets
+ if X11 package, and man pages are installed, add install.man to
${INSTALL_TARGET}, rather than using a separate command to do this.
Also added CATn= blah.0, similar to MANn= blah.1, which installs
pre-formatted man pages, like the ones imake produces.
bsd.port.mk would always find the executable (using which), even if
there wasn't an executable in the $PATH. I've modified bsd.port.mk to
look for the executable directly, and simplified the shell code
somewhat in the process. There may be a lurking bug in shell exit
status handling here.
Noted by matthew green <mrg@madrugada.eterna.com.au> and Chris
Demetriou <cgd@netbsd.org> (PR pkg/4337) but I was too stupid to
realise what was happening. That, and a copy of gmake in
/usr/local/bin.
- sys.mk:
add ${OBJC} and ${OBJCFLAGS} (equivalent to ${CC} and
${CFLAGS} respectively), and ${COMPILE.m} and ${LINK.m} rules
- bsd.sys.mk:
add .m, .m.o, and .m.ln rules (as per the C rules in sys.mk).
it's here, rather than in sys.mk, because `.m' isn't
exclusively used for Objective C files.
- bsd.lib.mk:
add .m.o, .m.po, .m.so, and .m.ln rules (as per C)