Commit graph

211 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
jlam
07a9d8dfb2 Support a new global variable:
BUILDLINK_PREFER_PKGSRC
	This variable determines whether or not to prefer the pkgsrc
	versions of software that is also present in the base system.

	This variable is multi-state:
		defined, or "yes"	always prefer the pkgsrc versions
		not defined, or "no"	only use the pkgsrc versions if
					needed by dependency requirements

	This can also take a list of packages for which to prefer the
	pkgsrc-installed software.  The package names may be found by
	consulting the value added to BUILDLINK_PACKAGES in the
	buildlink[23].mk files for that package.
2004-02-05 06:58:02 +00:00
jlam
3d74ada992 Pretend that all versions of NetBSD newer than 1.6U have Heimdal-0.6. 2004-02-02 11:30:45 +00:00
jlam
01a5abff01 Support BUILDLINK_DEPENDS.<pkg> being a list of values. 2004-01-24 03:12:31 +00:00
jlam
83532f92f6 Support a new yes/no variable "KERBEROS_PREFIX_CMDS" that can be used by
Kerberos implementation packages to decide whether to prefix certain
commands with a "k" to differentiate it from system tools with similar
names.  KERBEROS_PREFIX_CMDS defaults to "no".
2004-01-15 12:48:00 +00:00
markd
f8c2eb7eb1 Fix build with gcc3. 2004-01-13 02:05:29 +00:00
jlam
18ec955c8a whitespace. 2004-01-13 00:00:32 +00:00
jlam
a41e499e44 Note CONFLICT with forthcoming mit-krb5 package. 2004-01-11 00:00:28 +00:00
jlam
99ac5d408b Add a rc.d script to start the kdc daemon on the Kerberos master server. 2004-01-10 21:59:29 +00:00
jlam
c0a16733a6 Back out previous. This doesn't work as expected and needs more thought. 2004-01-10 21:35:26 +00:00
jlam
ca86c17d51 The buildlink3 wrappers automatically remove -I/usr/include/* from the
command line options.  We need -I/usr/include/krb5 to build against
heimdal, so symlink the headers in /usr/include/krb5 into ${BUILDLINK_DIR}
so they can be found.
2004-01-10 19:44:16 +00:00
jlam
694ff19aff Initial import of heimdal-0.6 into security/heimdal.
Heimdal is a free implementation of Kerberos 5.

Kerberos is a system for authenticating users and services on a network.
It is built upon the assumption that the network is "unsafe".  Kerberos
is a trusted third-party service.  That means that there is a third
party (the Kerberos server) that is trusted by all the entities on the
network (users and services, usually called "principals").  All
principals share a secret password (or key) with the Kerberos server and
this enables principals to verify that the messages from the Kerberos
server are authentic.  Thus trusting the Kerberos server, users and
services can authenticate each other.
2004-01-10 14:56:44 +00:00