propogated by copy and paste.
1. Primarily the "empty variable" default assignment, which is mostly
${name}_flags="", but fix a few others as well.
2. Where they are not already documented, add the existence of the _flags
(or other deleted empties) option to the comments, and in some cases add
comments from scratch.
3. Replace things that look like:
prefix=%%PREFIX%%
command=${prefix}/sbin/foo
to just use %%PREFIX%%. In many cases the $prefix variable is only used
once, and in some cases it is not used at all.
4. In a few cases remove ${name}_flags from command_args
5. Remove a long-stale comment about putting the port's rc.d script in
/etc/rc.d (which is no longer necessary).
No PORTREVISION bumps because all of these changes are noops.
* mailbox/CHANGELOG - add missing header for 1.270;
* miniserv.pl - handle login failures from handle_login;
* uconfig.cgi - use module_root_directory to locate modules, check if a module function is defined before calling it;
* uconfig_save.cgi - module_root_directory;
* web-lib-funcs.pl - solaris fix.
We have not checked for this KEYWORD for a long time now, so this
is a complete noop, and thus no PORTREVISION bump. Removing it at
this point is mostly for pedantic reasons, and partly to avoid
perpetuating this anachronism by copy and paste to future scripts.
base rcorder, hard coded variable values in these scripts
are overriding the values in /etc/rc.conf[.local] (due to
the way that variables from the latter are read at boot time).
Therefore, change the boot scripts to set default values only
if the variable is unset in /etc/rc.conf[.local]. This will
allow the service to start at boot time if it's been enabled
as the user would expect.
This change will be a noop for users who have systems that
have not yet been upgraded to the new rc.d code in the base.
In many cases there are other variables in the scripts that
should get similar treatment, however I did not change
anything other than the _enable lines. I'll leave the rest
up to the maintainers to do as they see fit.
Bump PORTREVISION to make sure that users and packages
pick up this change.