Unsorted entries in PLIST files have generated a pkglint warning for at
least 12 years. Somewhat more recently, pkglint has learned to sort
PLIST files automatically. Since pkglint 5.4.23, the sorting is only
done in obvious, simple cases. These have been applied by running:
pkglint -Cnone,PLIST -Wnone,plist-sort -r -F
developer is officially maintaining the package.
The rationale for changing this from "tech-pkg" to "pkgsrc-users" is
that it implies that any user can try to maintain the package (by
submitting patches to the mailing list). Since the folks most likely
to care about the package are the folks that want to use it or are
already using it, this would leverage the energy of users who aren't
developers.
"extract" script for extraction. Many cases where a custom EXTRACT_CMD
simply copied the distfile into the work directory are no longer
needed. The extract script also hides differences between pax and
tar behind a common command-line interface, so we no longer need code
that's conditional on whether EXTRACT_USING is tar or pax.
Previously, ttmkfdir's output was redirected to fonts.dir,
while the correct behaviour is to let it create fonts.scale
and then let mkfontdir merge fonts.scale into fonts.dir.
type1 handling had a similar problem.
Get the wanted behaviour by automatically appending the contents of
FONTS_TTF_DIRS and FONTS_TYPE1_DIRS to FONTS_X11_DIRS.
Also, save a subshell in install/fonts while there.
Bump PKGREVISION for all affected packages.
jmmv@ says ok.
Rui-Xiang Guo in PR pkg/17829.
Bitstream Cyberbit is a TrueType font. It is an international font,
containing characters from many languages. Each character is encoded with its
Unicode value, according to Unicode 2.0 standards.
Cyberbit was developed by Bitstream to provide Unicode Consortium members with
a test font. It is therefore distributed freely to customers that need advanced
multilingual fonts for testing and other non-commercial uses. Customers that
wish to use Cyberbit for other purposes must license the font from Bitstream.