Always put a version suffix to the ruby name (no matter if ruby is the
default version) to avoid mess in future.
[Notes for i386 users]
If you are a ruby developer and still want to stick with ruby 1.6 as
default, please add RUBY_DEFAULT_VER=1.6 to /etc/make.conf.
If you are a ruby developer and want to keep ruby 1.6 as default,
please add RUBY_DEFAULT_VER=1.6 to /etc/make.conf. Otherwise, please
run the following series of commands to migrate to ruby 1.8:
1) Reinstall portupgrade manually (and ruby 1.8 will be installed)
pkg_delete portupgrade-\*
(cd /usr/ports/sysutils/portupgrade; make install clean)
2) Reinstall everything that depends on ruby 1.6 (to use ruby 1.8)
portupgrade -fr lang/ruby16
3) Reinstall ruby 1.8 (because the previous step kills symlinks)
portupgrade -f lang/ruby18
4) Deinstall ruby 1.6 stuff (if you are paranoia)
pkg_deinstall -ri lang/ruby16
It turned out that the configure target does not need to be
overridable but just RUBY_ARCH does for those who are to use a
hand-built interpreter with modules from ports.
Hint given from: obrien
Approved by: kris (implicitly), and myself
I have tested a few modules that worked fine. I hope such things
as ruby_r will die soon.
For FreeBSD 4.x and prior, ruby_r will forever be needed because
the interpreter (ruby) linked with libc.so crashes when a module
that is (indirectly) linked with libc_r.so, because stdio and stuff
get inconsitent inside of them.
AMD64 ports still need some more testing and tweaking)
By this update, openssl, webrick and xmlrpc modules are now part of
the standard distribution.
Since this version should no longer be called -devel, I am planning on
repo-moving lang/ruby{,-devel} to lang/ruby{16,18}, respectively.
which now supports FreeBSD/sparc64.
Set ONLY_FOR_ARCHS to i386, alpha and sparc64. Ruby does not support
IA64 yet. It does not even build or install correctly. We need some
clue to the IA64 stack structure and handling of the IA64 register
windows.
option instead. ftp-master still has the old distfile of ruby-rdtool
before a repack and the checksum mismatch it causes is getting a show
stopper on bento.
- Update to the 1.6.8 final release. (which fixes a couple of
coredumping bugs)
- Update Oni Guruma (alternative BSDL regexp engine) to 20021210.
- Attach a small knob for debugging.
lang/ruby-devel
- Update to 1.8.0 preview 1 + errata patch. (fixes a couple of
coredumping bugs)
- Update Oni Guruma (alternative BSDL regexp engine) to 20021210.
- Fix pkg-plist nits.
lang/ruby16-shim-ruby18
- Update to 1.8.0 preview 1. (sync with 1.6.8 & 1.8.0 preview1)
- Fix pkg-plist nits.
Approved by: lioux (and self)
A Merry Christmas to: all of you
1.7.3.2002.12.11, and lang/ruby-devel to 1.7.3-2002.12.12.
- Fix a few bugs that lead to core dump, one in the ruby interpreter
and another in the syslog module.
Reported by: ume (net/dtcp was a victim)
- Fix an installation problem occasionally seen on bento. (a bug in
Makefile that caused race)
Submitted by: bento
- Fix a problem that irb(1) didn't work because the symlink was wrong.
Submitted by: Jos Backus <jos@catnook.com>
- Get rid of move & symlink spaghetti completely from the installation
process.
Discussed with: portmgr (will)
FreeBSD/sparc64 fails to build this and somehow the entire OS gets
frozen while running `miniruby'. I'd appreciate if someone with a
clue could help me fix the problem.
fixes several coredump bugs and fatal threading problems.
Remove the autoconf dependency by including a pre-generated configure
script in the distfile. It now also includes a pre-generated parse.c
made by bison 1.35.
containing a pregenerated configure and a parse.c generated with bison
1.35. This is to offer a smaller (.tar.bz2) distfile, remove the
autoconf dependency and benefit from a bit more efficient parse.c than
that which byacc(1) generates.