the 32 ports that still use it. Bump PORTREVISION on their dependent
ports except the ones that depend on these:
audio/libogg
audio/libvorbis
devel/pcre
ftp/curl
graphics/jpeg
graphics/libart_lgpl
graphics/tiff
textproc/expat2
textproc/libxslt
In these cases the same trick as in the recent gettext update is used.
The ports install a symlink with the old library version. When enough
of their dependent ports have had regular updates the remaining ones can
get a PORTREVISION bump and the links can be removed.
Also remove the devel/pcre dependency from USE_GNOME=glib20. It causes
over 2200 packages to depend on devel/pcre while less than 200 actually
link with it. The glib20 package still depends on devel/pcre so this
should not make a difference for ports with USE_GNOME=glib20. Also,
libdata/pkgconfig/glib-2.0.pc lists pcre as a private library so
USE_GNOME=glib20 should not propagate it.
PR: 195724
Exp-run by: antoine
Approved by: portmgr (antoine)
- Convert to USES qmake and dos2unix
- Convert to staging
- Use LOCALBASE instead of hardconding /usr/local.
- Fix build on 10 and head with new libc++
PR: ports/183933
Submitted by: Fernando <fernando.apesteguia@gmail.com> (maintainer)
It brings bison as a build dependency in case it is set the following way:
USES= bison or USES= bison:build
it brings bison as a run dependency in case it is set the following way:
USES= bison:run
it brings bison both as a run and build dependency in case it the set the following way:
USES= bison:both
While here trim some headers
Convert some USE_GNOME= gnomehack to USES= pathfix
- add build dependencies on bison and flex
while here:
- trim Makefile header
- remove redundant tabs in Makefile
- use SF shortcut in MASTER_SITES
- remove indefinite article from COMMENT
- remove exclicit dependency on qmake, since it is already defined in USE_QT4
- change BUILD_DEPENDS usage to more common
- remove trailing whitespace in pkg-descr
PR: 172583
Submitted by: Fernando <fernando.apesteguia at gmail dot com> (maintainer)
Feature safe: yes
(especially middle and high-school students) the basics of computer
programming.
It uses traditional control structures like gosub, for/next, and goto,
which helps kids easily see how program flow-control works. It has a
built-in graphics mode which lets them draw pictures on screen in
minutes, and a set of detailed, easy-to-follow tutorials that
introduce programming concepts through fun exercises.
WWW: http://http://www.basic256.org
PR: ports/160367
Submitted by: Fernando <fernando.apesteguia@gmail.com>