Requires mk-configure 0.34.0 or above to build
Remove broken hack with CC_TYPE, latest mk-configure is able to do
everything automatically
Use new mk-configure's feature libl instead of LEXLIB variable
Use CFLAGS.check for disabling warnerr
mknod: fix build failure on latest OpenSuSE tumbleweed
id, date: fixes for Darwin-15.6.0 (disabling warnings)
Version 7.0.0.6, by Aleksey Cheusov, Sun, 19 Jan 2020 01:45:59 +0300
Add support for Solaris-10 and -11 to a lot of utilities
(almost all with the help of musl-fts library!).
A lot of fixes for SunC compiler (versions 5.11 and 5.15).
mk/mkc_imp.f_bsd_getopt.mk: fix for target "clean"
Fix feature "efun" on SunOS-5.10.
Add new feature "strsep" that provides portable strsep(3) and stresep(3)
find, ls, mtree and xinstall: fix build failure on eglibc-2.13
======================================================================
Version 7.0.0.5, by Aleksey Cheusov, Mon, 6 Jan 2020 01:43:19 +0300
Fix typos doc/INSTALL
Fix bugs in the local feature "base64". As a result we fix some
compilation issues on musl-based Linuxes (Alpine Linux).
Fix compilation failures (seen on musl-based Alpine Linux) of the
following programs: compress, sort, hexdump, id, leave, uudecode
Implement new local feature "bsd_signal" that implements
BSD functions "sigblock", "sigsetmask", "sigmask" and "siggetmask".
A lot of fixes and improvements from previous release in utilities
and portability code.
See https://github.com/cheusov/nbase for details.
Introduce CURSES_LIBNAME build-time variable (see doc/INSTALL)
Almost all utilities set WARNERR to YES.
Latest mk-configure is needed for build.
This release was successfully tested on SunOS-5.11, FreeBSD-12.0.3,
NetBSD-8 and 8.99, OpenBSD-6.4, Darwin and diverse glibc-based
Linuxes. GCC and CLang compilers were tested.
nbase is a collection of NetBSD tools portable to Linux, MacOS-X and other
UNIX-like systems. Its version looks like x.y.z.n, where x is a NetBSD major
version, y -- NetBSD minor version, z -- NetBSD patch level, and n -- nbase
release number. For example, 7.0.0.4 means fourth release of nbase that
corresponds to NetBSD 7.0-RELEASE.