NetBSD/gnu
atatat 3fe5d819ac Enable MILTER support in the in-tree sendmail. This entails
installing two new libraries (and two lint thingys, but no shared or
pic stuff) and two headers files (into /usr/include/milter).

Shared libraries (etc) could be built, but as I'm currently unsure of
the ABI/API stability, I'm going to examine it more closely before
enabling it, as opposed to finding out later that it's volatile and
disabling it.

NOTE!  We really ought to have a generic rc.d script to start the
milters (before sendmail or any other MTA that you have that uses
them), but I haven't finished it yet.  The milter support here is
being enabled to satisfy current popular demand.  I'll come up with a
script soon.  Unless someone feels like beating me to it.  So until
then, you're on your own.
2003-07-04 04:52:59 +00:00
..
dist Add a note about updating config.h. 2003-07-03 15:41:37 +00:00
lib When MKPIC is "no" and we force MKLINKLIB to "yes" to provide 2003-06-26 02:49:31 +00:00
libexec possible scanf overrun 2003-05-17 15:05:19 +00:00
usr.bin Update for 4.6. 2003-07-03 15:39:59 +00:00
usr.sbin Enable MILTER support in the in-tree sendmail. This entails 2003-07-04 04:52:59 +00:00
Makefile Use @true instead of @${TRUE} in includes-foo targets, since there is no 2001-10-12 21:05:08 +00:00
README Remove completely outdated maintenance history, and add proper NetBSD RCS tag. 2002-09-22 09:47:56 +00:00

README

$NetBSD: README,v 1.4 2002/09/22 09:47:56 wiz Exp $

Organization of Sources:

This directory hierarchy is using a new organization that
separates the GNU sources from the BSD-style infrastructure
used to build the GNU sources.  The GNU sources are kept in
the standard GNU source tree layout under:

	dist/*

The build infrastructure uses the normal BSD way under:

	lib/*
	usr.bin/*

The makefiles in the above hierarchy will "reach over" into
the GNU sources (src/gnu/dist) for everything they need.


Maintenance Strategy:

The sources under src/gnu/dist are generally a combination of
some published distribution plus changes that we submit to the
maintainers and that are not yet published by them.  There are
a few files that are never expected to be submitted to the FSF,
(i.e. BSD-style makefiles and such) and those generally should
stay in src/gnu/lib or src/gnu/usr.bin (the BSD build areas).

Make sure all changes made to the GNU sources are submitted to
the appropriate maintainer, but only after coordinating with the
NetBSD maintainers by sending your proposed submission to the
<tech-toolchain@netbsd.org> mailing list.  Only send the changes
to the third-party maintainers after consensus has been reached.