automatically appended by the build to "sysconfdir", so change setting
from ?= to =. Also remove the MAKE_FLAGS line that was supposed to do the
same thing as the previous change, but was apparently not working.
- Fixed pg_last_notice() (could cause random crashes in PostgreSQL
applications, even if they didn't use pg_last_notice()). (Zeev)
- Made the PostgreSQL driver do internal row counting when iterating through
result sets. (gvz@2scale.net)
- Made the length argument (argument 2) to pg_loread() optional, if not
specified data will be read in 1kb chunks. (Sterling)
- Added a third argument to pg_lowrite() which is the length of the data to
write. (Sterling)
- Worked around a bug in the MySQL client library that could cause PHP to hang
when using unbuffered queries. (Zeev)
- Fixed MySQL extension to work with MySQL 4.0. (Jani)
- Fixed a crash in dbase_replace_record. (Patch by robin.marlow@dps-int.com)
- Fixed a bug in dbase_get_record() and dbase_get_record_with_names().
boolean fields are now returned correctly.
Patch by Lawrence E. Widman <widman@cardiothink.com> (Jani)
* Use pthread.buildlink.mk as OpenLDAP now builds correctly with GNU pth for
a pthread implementation. This allows slurpd to be built on all platforms.
* Use tcp_wrapper/buildlink.mk and always enable the use of TCP wrappers.
* Use the general INSTALL scripts to deal with the config files and
directories needed by this package. This now works correctly whether we
build from source or if we install via a binary package.
* Honor PKG_SYSCONFDIR.
RDB is a fast, portable Relational Database Management System without
arbitrary limits (other than memory and processor speed). It uses the
"operator/stream" DBMS paradigm. The operators are Unix filters (i.e.
they read STDIN and write STDOUT), so they can be connected by pipes.
Provided in PR 15009 by natej@aol.net, modified by me to conform to
NetBSD standards - use perl buildlink functionality, use REPLACE_PERL,
modify PLIST to conform to standards, general cleanup to pass pkglint.
1) locking problems due to a few race conditions
2) fixing a bug in `create temporary table' wich could contaminate the
main database file opened too
3) bug fix in b-tree subsystem that could sometimes cause the first row of
a table to be repeated during a database scan.
cdb is a fast, reliable, simple package for creating and reading
constant databases.
cdb is designed to be used in mission-critical applications like
e-mail. Database replacement is safe against system crashes. Readers
don't have to pause during a rewrite.
found at run-time, as before, the -Wl,-R options that set the run-time
library search path weren't being used. Simply using LDFLAGS without
filtering doesn't work because the configure script appends CFLAGS to
LDFLAGS, and some commonly-used compiler options, e.g. -mcpu=..., which
causes python's makesetup to choke because the options aren't in the list
of recognized linker options. Thanks to D'Arcy J.M. Cain <darcy@druid.net>
for pointing out the error and possible solution.
bugs removal, fixing the behaviour of comparison operators so that they are
consistent with the order of entries in an index, correct handling of
integers in SQL expressions that are larger than what can be represented by
the machine integer and locking protocol fixes.
The author also incorporated my suggestions after the messy LP64 patches I
made; its now a lot more clean allthough there are still a few warnings but
they are checked and OK.
Makefiles during the build process by touching various auto{conf,make}
source files to make them up-to-date. Packages that require regenerating
the configure script and Makefile.in files should make the appropriate
calls to auto{conf,make} in a pre-configure target. This allows the
various targets listed in ${_CONFIG_PREREQ} to modify the generated files
without triggering the GNU auto* tools and having the modifications be
overwritten.
differs from the distfile version number. G/C some the unused variables
in unixodbc/Makefile.common related to the old way of handling version
numbers.
differs from the distfile version number. G/C some the unused variables
in postgresql/Makefile.common related to the old way of handling version
numbers.