Changes 3.1.6:
1. `gawk 'program' /non/existant/file' no longer core dumps.
2. gawk now only uses the locale's decimal point
3. `gawk -v BINMODE=1 ...' works again.
4. Internal file names like `/dev/user' now work again. (Note that these
file names are obsolete and will go away eventually.)
5. Problems with wide strings in non "C" locales have been straightened
out everywhere. (At least, we think so.)
6. Use of `ansi2knr' is no longer supported. Please use an ANSI C compiler.
7. Updated to Autoconf 2.61, Automake 1.10, and Gettext 0.16.1.
8. The getopt* and regex* files were synchronized with current GLIBC CVS.
See the ChangeLog for the versions and minor edits made.
9. There are additional --lint-old warnings.
10. Gawk now uses getaddrinfo(3) to look up names and IP addresses. This
allows the use of an IPv6 format address and paves the way for
eventual addition of `/inet6/...' and `/inet4/...' hostnames.
11. We believe gawk to now be valgrind clean. At least when run against
the test suite.
12. A number of issues dealing with the formatting and printing of very
large numbers in integer formats have been dealt with and fixed.
13. Gawk now converts "+inf", "-inf", "+nan" and "-nan" into the corresponding
magic IEEE floating point values. Only those strings (case independent)
work. With --posix, gawk calls the system strtod directly. You asked
for it, you got it, you deal with it.
14. Defining YYDEBUG enables the -D command line option.
15. Gawk should now work out of the box on Tandem NSK/OSS systems.
16. Lint messages rationalized: many more of the messages are now printed
only once, instead of every time they are encountered.
17. The strftime() function now accepts an optional third argument, which
if non-zero or non-null, indicates that the time should be formatted
as UTC instead of as local time.
18. The precedence of concatenation and `| getline' (in something like
"echo " "date" | getline stuff) has been reverted to the earlier
behavior and now once again matches Unix awk.
19. New configure time flag --disable-directories-fatal which causes
gawk to silently skip directories on the command line. This behavior
is also enabled for --traditional, since it's what Unix awk does.
20. A new option, --use-lc-numeric, forces use of the locale's decimal
point without the rest of the draconian restrictions imposed by
--posix. This softens somewhat the stance taken in item 2.
21. Everything relevant has been updated to the GPL 3.
22. Array growth should be faster now, at no cost in space.
23. Lots more tests.
24. One new translation.
25. Various bugs fixed, see the ChangeLog for details.
2007-11-02 08:17:59 +01:00
|
|
|
# $NetBSD: Makefile,v 1.38 2007/11/02 07:17:59 adam Exp $
|
1999-12-10 18:33:39 +01:00
|
|
|
|
Changes 3.1.6:
1. `gawk 'program' /non/existant/file' no longer core dumps.
2. gawk now only uses the locale's decimal point
3. `gawk -v BINMODE=1 ...' works again.
4. Internal file names like `/dev/user' now work again. (Note that these
file names are obsolete and will go away eventually.)
5. Problems with wide strings in non "C" locales have been straightened
out everywhere. (At least, we think so.)
6. Use of `ansi2knr' is no longer supported. Please use an ANSI C compiler.
7. Updated to Autoconf 2.61, Automake 1.10, and Gettext 0.16.1.
8. The getopt* and regex* files were synchronized with current GLIBC CVS.
See the ChangeLog for the versions and minor edits made.
9. There are additional --lint-old warnings.
10. Gawk now uses getaddrinfo(3) to look up names and IP addresses. This
allows the use of an IPv6 format address and paves the way for
eventual addition of `/inet6/...' and `/inet4/...' hostnames.
11. We believe gawk to now be valgrind clean. At least when run against
the test suite.
12. A number of issues dealing with the formatting and printing of very
large numbers in integer formats have been dealt with and fixed.
13. Gawk now converts "+inf", "-inf", "+nan" and "-nan" into the corresponding
magic IEEE floating point values. Only those strings (case independent)
work. With --posix, gawk calls the system strtod directly. You asked
for it, you got it, you deal with it.
14. Defining YYDEBUG enables the -D command line option.
15. Gawk should now work out of the box on Tandem NSK/OSS systems.
16. Lint messages rationalized: many more of the messages are now printed
only once, instead of every time they are encountered.
17. The strftime() function now accepts an optional third argument, which
if non-zero or non-null, indicates that the time should be formatted
as UTC instead of as local time.
18. The precedence of concatenation and `| getline' (in something like
"echo " "date" | getline stuff) has been reverted to the earlier
behavior and now once again matches Unix awk.
19. New configure time flag --disable-directories-fatal which causes
gawk to silently skip directories on the command line. This behavior
is also enabled for --traditional, since it's what Unix awk does.
20. A new option, --use-lc-numeric, forces use of the locale's decimal
point without the rest of the draconian restrictions imposed by
--posix. This softens somewhat the stance taken in item 2.
21. Everything relevant has been updated to the GPL 3.
22. Array growth should be faster now, at no cost in space.
23. Lots more tests.
24. One new translation.
25. Various bugs fixed, see the ChangeLog for details.
2007-11-02 08:17:59 +01:00
|
|
|
DISTNAME= gawk-3.1.6
|
1999-12-12 22:19:04 +01:00
|
|
|
CATEGORIES= lang
|
1999-12-10 18:33:39 +01:00
|
|
|
MASTER_SITES= ${MASTER_SITE_GNU:=gawk/}
|
2003-10-06 08:57:40 +02:00
|
|
|
EXTRACT_SUFX= .tar.bz2
|
1999-12-10 18:33:39 +01:00
|
|
|
|
2003-07-17 23:41:05 +02:00
|
|
|
MAINTAINER= bouyer@NetBSD.org
|
1999-12-10 18:33:39 +01:00
|
|
|
HOMEPAGE= http://www.gnu.org/software/gawk/gawk.html
|
2001-02-17 10:06:56 +01:00
|
|
|
COMMENT= GNU awk
|
1999-12-10 18:33:39 +01:00
|
|
|
|
2003-07-05 17:14:38 +02:00
|
|
|
CONFLICTS= ja-gawk-[0-9]*
|
|
|
|
|
2004-10-14 05:24:21 +02:00
|
|
|
PKG_INSTALLATION_TYPES= overwrite pkgviews
|
2007-09-06 21:56:16 +02:00
|
|
|
PKG_DESTDIR_SUPPORT= user-destdir
|
2004-10-14 05:24:21 +02:00
|
|
|
|
2005-09-05 18:58:22 +02:00
|
|
|
GNU_CONFIGURE= yes
|
|
|
|
USE_PKGLOCALEDIR= yes
|
2006-07-06 15:14:01 +02:00
|
|
|
USE_TOOLS+= msgfmt
|
2002-12-12 04:17:13 +01:00
|
|
|
TEST_TARGET= check
|
Changes 3.1.6:
1. `gawk 'program' /non/existant/file' no longer core dumps.
2. gawk now only uses the locale's decimal point
3. `gawk -v BINMODE=1 ...' works again.
4. Internal file names like `/dev/user' now work again. (Note that these
file names are obsolete and will go away eventually.)
5. Problems with wide strings in non "C" locales have been straightened
out everywhere. (At least, we think so.)
6. Use of `ansi2knr' is no longer supported. Please use an ANSI C compiler.
7. Updated to Autoconf 2.61, Automake 1.10, and Gettext 0.16.1.
8. The getopt* and regex* files were synchronized with current GLIBC CVS.
See the ChangeLog for the versions and minor edits made.
9. There are additional --lint-old warnings.
10. Gawk now uses getaddrinfo(3) to look up names and IP addresses. This
allows the use of an IPv6 format address and paves the way for
eventual addition of `/inet6/...' and `/inet4/...' hostnames.
11. We believe gawk to now be valgrind clean. At least when run against
the test suite.
12. A number of issues dealing with the formatting and printing of very
large numbers in integer formats have been dealt with and fixed.
13. Gawk now converts "+inf", "-inf", "+nan" and "-nan" into the corresponding
magic IEEE floating point values. Only those strings (case independent)
work. With --posix, gawk calls the system strtod directly. You asked
for it, you got it, you deal with it.
14. Defining YYDEBUG enables the -D command line option.
15. Gawk should now work out of the box on Tandem NSK/OSS systems.
16. Lint messages rationalized: many more of the messages are now printed
only once, instead of every time they are encountered.
17. The strftime() function now accepts an optional third argument, which
if non-zero or non-null, indicates that the time should be formatted
as UTC instead of as local time.
18. The precedence of concatenation and `| getline' (in something like
"echo " "date" | getline stuff) has been reverted to the earlier
behavior and now once again matches Unix awk.
19. New configure time flag --disable-directories-fatal which causes
gawk to silently skip directories on the command line. This behavior
is also enabled for --traditional, since it's what Unix awk does.
20. A new option, --use-lc-numeric, forces use of the locale's decimal
point without the rest of the draconian restrictions imposed by
--posix. This softens somewhat the stance taken in item 2.
21. Everything relevant has been updated to the GPL 3.
22. Array growth should be faster now, at no cost in space.
23. Lots more tests.
24. One new translation.
25. Various bugs fixed, see the ChangeLog for details.
2007-11-02 08:17:59 +01:00
|
|
|
INFO_FILES= yes
|
2003-07-04 22:57:21 +02:00
|
|
|
|
2005-12-05 21:49:47 +01:00
|
|
|
MAKE_ENV+= PKGLOCALEDIR=${PKGLOCALEDIR:Q}
|
2003-06-07 18:03:05 +02:00
|
|
|
|
2005-07-13 17:21:57 +02:00
|
|
|
LDFLAGS.IRIX+= -lgen
|
|
|
|
|
Update to version 3.1.0 (lots of new features and bug fixes).
Enable this package for all platforms.
Added GAWK_ENABLE_PORTALS to mk/bsd.pkg.defaults.mk to enable/disable gawk
handling file names that start with `/p/' as a 4.4 BSD type portal file.
Changes from 3.0.4 to 3.0.5:
- bug fix release only.
Changes from 3.0.5 to 3.0.6:
- bug fix release only.
Changes from 3.0.6 to 3.1.0:
- A new PROCINFO array provides info about the process. The non-I/O /dev/xxx
files are now obsolete, and their use always generates a warning.
- A new `mktime' builtin function was added for creating time stamps. The
`mktime' function written in awk was removed from the user's guide.
- New `--gen-po' option creates GNU gettext .po files for strings marked
with a leading underscore.
- Gawk now completely interprets special file names internally, ignoring the
existence of real /dev/stdin, /dev/stdout files, etc.
- The mmap code was removed. It was a worthwhile experiment that just
didn't work out.
- The BINMODE variable is new; on non-UNIX systems it affects how gawk
opens files for text vs. binary.
- Gawk no longer supports `next file' as two words.
- On systems that support it, gawk now sets the `close on exec' flag on all
files and pipes it opens. This makes sure that child processes run via
system() or pipes have plenty of file descriptors available.
- If `--posix' is in effect, newlines are not allowed after ?:.
- Weird OFMT/CONVFMT formats no longer cause fatal errors.
- Diagnostics about array parameters now include the parameter's name,
not just its number.
- It is now possible to open a two-way pipe via the `|&' operator.
See the discussion in the manual about putting `sort' into such a pipeline,
though. (NOTE! This is borrowed from ksh: it is not the same as
the same operator in csh!)
- The close() function now takes an optional second string argument
that allows closing one or the other end of the two-way pipe to
a co-process. This is needed to use `sort' in a co-process, see
the doc.
- If TCP/IP is available, special file names beginning with `/inet'
can be used with `|&' for IPC.
- With `--enable-portals' on the configure command line, gawk will also
treat file names that start with `/p/' as a 4.4 BSD type portal file,
i.e., a two-way pipe for `|&'.
- Unrecognized escapes, such as "\q" now always generate a warning.
- The LINT variable is new; it provides dynamic control over the --lint
option.
- Lint warnings can be made fatal by using --lint=fatal or `LINT = "fatal"'.
Use this if you're really serious about portable code.
- A number of lint warnings have been added. Most notably, gawk will
detect if a variable is used before assigned to. Warnings for
when a string that isn't a number gets converted to a number are
in the code but disabled; they seem to be too picky in practice.
Also, gawk will now warn about function parameter names that shadow
global variable names.
- It is now possible to dynamically add builtin functions on systems
that support dlopen. This facility is not (yet) as portable or well
integrated as it might be. *** WARNING *** THIS FEATURE WILL EVOLVE!
- Profiling has been added! A separate version of gawk, named pgawk, is
built and generates a run-time execution profile. The --profile option
can be used to change the default output file. In regular gawk, this
option pretty-prints the parse tree.
- Gawk has been internationalized, using GNU gettext. Translations for
future distributions are most welcome.
- New asort() function for sorting arrays. See the doc for details.
- The match function takes an optional array third argument to hold
the text matched by parenthesized sub-expressions.
- The bit op functions and octal and hex source code constants are on by
default, no longer a configure-time option. Recognition of non-decimal
data is now enabled at runtime with --non-decimal-data command line option.
- Internationalization features available at the awk level: new TEXTDOMAIN
variable and bindtextdomain() and dcgettext() functions. printf formats
may contain the "%2$3.5d" kind of notation for use in translations. See
the texinfo manual for details.
- The return value from close() has been rationalized. Most notably,
closing something that wasn't open returns -1 but remains non-fatal.
- The array effeciency change from 3.0.5 was reverted; the semantics were
not right. Additionally, index values of previously stored elements
can no longer change dynamically.
- The new option --dump-variables dumps a list of all global variables and
their final types and values to a file you give, or to `awkvars.out'.
- Gawk now uses a recent version of random.c courtesy of the FreeBSD
project.
- The gawk source code now uses ANSI C function definitions (new style),
with ansi2knr to translate code for old compilers.
- `for (iggy in foo)' loops should be more robust now in the face of
adding/deleting elements in the middle; they loop over just the elements
that are present in the array when the loop starts.
2002-04-04 15:58:25 +02:00
|
|
|
.include "../../mk/bsd.prefs.mk"
|
|
|
|
|
Update to 3.1.4, convert to bsd.options.mk:
Changes from 3.1.3 to 3.1.4
---------------------------
1. Gawk now supports the POSIX %F format, falling back to %f if the local
system printf doesn't handle it.
2. Gawk now supports the ' flag in printf. E.g., %'d in a locale with thousands
separators includes the thousands separator in the value, e.g. 12,345.
This has one problem; the ' flag is next to impossible to use on the
command line, without major quoting games. Oh well, TANSTAAFL.
3. The dfa code has been reinstated; the performance degradation was
just too awful. Sigh. (For fun, use `export GAWK_NO_DFA=1' to
see the difference.)
4. The special case `x = x y' is now recognized in the grammar, and gawk
now uses `realloc' to append the new value to the end of the existing
one. This can speed up the common case of appending onto a string.
5. The dfa code was upgraded with most of the fixes from grep 2.5.1, and
the regex code was upgraded with GLIBC as mid-January 2004. The regex
code is faster than it was, but still not as fast as the dfa code, so
the dfa code stays in. The getopt code was also synced to current GLIBC.
6. Support code upgraded to Automake 1.8.5, Autoconf 2.59, and gettext 0.14.1.
7. When --posix is in effect, sub/gsub now follow the 2001 POSIX behavior.
Yippee. This is even documented in the manual.
8. Gawk will now recover children that have died (input pipelines, two-way
pipes), upon detecting EOF from them, thus avoiding filling
up the process table. Open file descriptors are not recovered
(unfortunately), since that could break awk semantics. See the
ChangeLog and the source code for the details.
9. Handling of numbers like `0,1' in non-American locales ought to
work correctly now.
10. IGNORECASE is now locale-aware for characters with values above 128.
The dfa matcher is now used for IGNORECASE matches too.
11. Dynamic function loading is better. The documentation has been improved
and some new APIs for use by dynamic functions have been added.
12. Gawk now has a fighting chance of working on older systems,
a la SunOS 4.1.x.
13. Issues with multibyte support on HP-UX are now resolved. `configure' now
disables such support there, since it's not up to what gawk needs.
14. There are now even more tests in the test suite.
15. Various bugs fixed; see ChangeLog for the details.
2004-08-26 02:00:20 +02:00
|
|
|
PKG_OPTIONS_VAR= PKG_OPTIONS.gawk
|
|
|
|
PKG_SUPPORTED_OPTIONS= portals
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
.include "../../mk/bsd.options.mk"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
.if !empty(PKG_OPTIONS:Mportals)
|
Update to version 3.1.0 (lots of new features and bug fixes).
Enable this package for all platforms.
Added GAWK_ENABLE_PORTALS to mk/bsd.pkg.defaults.mk to enable/disable gawk
handling file names that start with `/p/' as a 4.4 BSD type portal file.
Changes from 3.0.4 to 3.0.5:
- bug fix release only.
Changes from 3.0.5 to 3.0.6:
- bug fix release only.
Changes from 3.0.6 to 3.1.0:
- A new PROCINFO array provides info about the process. The non-I/O /dev/xxx
files are now obsolete, and their use always generates a warning.
- A new `mktime' builtin function was added for creating time stamps. The
`mktime' function written in awk was removed from the user's guide.
- New `--gen-po' option creates GNU gettext .po files for strings marked
with a leading underscore.
- Gawk now completely interprets special file names internally, ignoring the
existence of real /dev/stdin, /dev/stdout files, etc.
- The mmap code was removed. It was a worthwhile experiment that just
didn't work out.
- The BINMODE variable is new; on non-UNIX systems it affects how gawk
opens files for text vs. binary.
- Gawk no longer supports `next file' as two words.
- On systems that support it, gawk now sets the `close on exec' flag on all
files and pipes it opens. This makes sure that child processes run via
system() or pipes have plenty of file descriptors available.
- If `--posix' is in effect, newlines are not allowed after ?:.
- Weird OFMT/CONVFMT formats no longer cause fatal errors.
- Diagnostics about array parameters now include the parameter's name,
not just its number.
- It is now possible to open a two-way pipe via the `|&' operator.
See the discussion in the manual about putting `sort' into such a pipeline,
though. (NOTE! This is borrowed from ksh: it is not the same as
the same operator in csh!)
- The close() function now takes an optional second string argument
that allows closing one or the other end of the two-way pipe to
a co-process. This is needed to use `sort' in a co-process, see
the doc.
- If TCP/IP is available, special file names beginning with `/inet'
can be used with `|&' for IPC.
- With `--enable-portals' on the configure command line, gawk will also
treat file names that start with `/p/' as a 4.4 BSD type portal file,
i.e., a two-way pipe for `|&'.
- Unrecognized escapes, such as "\q" now always generate a warning.
- The LINT variable is new; it provides dynamic control over the --lint
option.
- Lint warnings can be made fatal by using --lint=fatal or `LINT = "fatal"'.
Use this if you're really serious about portable code.
- A number of lint warnings have been added. Most notably, gawk will
detect if a variable is used before assigned to. Warnings for
when a string that isn't a number gets converted to a number are
in the code but disabled; they seem to be too picky in practice.
Also, gawk will now warn about function parameter names that shadow
global variable names.
- It is now possible to dynamically add builtin functions on systems
that support dlopen. This facility is not (yet) as portable or well
integrated as it might be. *** WARNING *** THIS FEATURE WILL EVOLVE!
- Profiling has been added! A separate version of gawk, named pgawk, is
built and generates a run-time execution profile. The --profile option
can be used to change the default output file. In regular gawk, this
option pretty-prints the parse tree.
- Gawk has been internationalized, using GNU gettext. Translations for
future distributions are most welcome.
- New asort() function for sorting arrays. See the doc for details.
- The match function takes an optional array third argument to hold
the text matched by parenthesized sub-expressions.
- The bit op functions and octal and hex source code constants are on by
default, no longer a configure-time option. Recognition of non-decimal
data is now enabled at runtime with --non-decimal-data command line option.
- Internationalization features available at the awk level: new TEXTDOMAIN
variable and bindtextdomain() and dcgettext() functions. printf formats
may contain the "%2$3.5d" kind of notation for use in translations. See
the texinfo manual for details.
- The return value from close() has been rationalized. Most notably,
closing something that wasn't open returns -1 but remains non-fatal.
- The array effeciency change from 3.0.5 was reverted; the semantics were
not right. Additionally, index values of previously stored elements
can no longer change dynamically.
- The new option --dump-variables dumps a list of all global variables and
their final types and values to a file you give, or to `awkvars.out'.
- Gawk now uses a recent version of random.c courtesy of the FreeBSD
project.
- The gawk source code now uses ANSI C function definitions (new style),
with ansi2knr to translate code for old compilers.
- `for (iggy in foo)' loops should be more robust now in the face of
adding/deleting elements in the middle; they loop over just the elements
that are present in the array when the loop starts.
2002-04-04 15:58:25 +02:00
|
|
|
CONFIGURE_ARGS+= --enable-portals
|
|
|
|
.endif
|
|
|
|
|
2006-04-06 08:21:32 +02:00
|
|
|
BUILDLINK_API_DEPENDS.gettext+= gettext-lib>=0.10.36
|
2004-10-14 05:20:20 +02:00
|
|
|
|
2004-04-25 08:58:43 +02:00
|
|
|
.include "../../devel/gettext-lib/buildlink3.mk"
|
1999-12-10 18:33:39 +01:00
|
|
|
.include "../../mk/bsd.pkg.mk"
|