port (see below).
- Submitted this to current maintainer on Wednesday 14 March; no response yet
- The Python modules were not correctly installed to the Python site library
directory before. They are now. (Thanks to Michael Ewe <m.ewe@t-online.de>
for pointing out the issue.)
- Used PORTDOCS pragma in $PLIST.
PR: 25934
Submitted by: Johann Visagie <johann@egenetics.com>
the version to 2.3.2.
- Add checks for empty files, empty directories, core files, more
possible backup files, dotfiles, symlinks and CVS directories.
- Do not assume PATCHDIR always includes "/files/". Use the best
method to check whether a file is added to @checker as a patch file.
- Some trivial message style fixes.
The State Threads is a small application library which provides a
foundation for writing fast and highly scalable Internet applications
(such as web servers, proxy servers, mail transfer agents, and so on) on
UNIX-like platforms. It combines the simplicity of the multithreaded
programming paradigm, in which one thread supports each simultaneous
connection, with the performance and scalability of an event-driven
state machine architecture. In other words, this library offers a
threading API for structuring an Internet application as a state
machine.
The State Threads library is a derivative of the Netscape Portable
Runtime library (NSPR).
WWW: http://oss.sgi.com/projects/state-threads/
PR: 25189
Submitted by: tobez@tobez.org (Anton Berezin)
by forcing the CFLAGS to -O -pipe. Somehow, the alpha build always
tries to enforce a particular -mcpu=ev4 flag which of course cannot be
understood by the (AVR) xgcc later on. This looks to me like a bug in
the cross-compilation environment of gcc, but i'm tired of actually
finding the bug.
The compiled result of avr-gcc MD5 compares equal to something build
from an IA32 host platform.
next version. In the meantime, apply with the port.
FYI, the bug is demonstrated by this program:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <pth.h>
static int check_something(void *arg)
{
return (0);
}
static void *thread(void *arg)
{
printf("thread sleeping five seconds...\n");
pth_nap(pth_time(5, 0));
printf("thread is done sleeping\n"); /* bug: we never get here */
return (NULL);
}
int main(int ac, char **av)
{
pth_event_t ev;
pth_init();
pth_spawn(NULL, thread, NULL);
ev = pth_event(PTH_EVENT_FUNC, check_something, NULL, pth_time(2, 0));
while (1)
pth_wait(ev);
}
Since gcc (in the assumption of generating a native compiler) doesn't
want to cbe configured for an alpha*-*-freebsd* system, we hack the
configure script to allow this (similarly to netbsd). In the end, all
this will be ignored anyway since it's getting to become a
cross-compiler.
redirect to a new server, but they don't carry the old files anymore.
Unfortunately, in order to build the new stuff, we'd need a newer
avr-gcc first -- and that one's by now only available directly from
gcc's CVS repo, which is a little too `green' to me. Let's wait
another couple of months until they rolled a newer release of gcc and
binutils, and switch then.
By now, store the old distfile elsewhere.
Submitted by: fenner's ports build survey (very valuable service!)
<support@scitools.com> Tech Support from Understand C/C++ manufacturer,
we are allowed to remove the RESTRICTED tag as well as the LEGAL
warning.
Update to version 1.4 Build 104 from March 8, 2001.
- Correct a port versioning typo:
o Instead of using PORTVERSION=14b104 which both reflects the
distfile naming convention and follows the naming convention used
in this port; we will switch to PORTVERSION=1.4.104 which reflects
the Changelog information
o To avoid "who came before" problems since last port was
PORTVERSION=14b103, BUMP PORTEPOCH.
- Fix a PLIST unnecessary warning
- Version Changelog: http://www.scitools.com/ucpp_build_log.html