Commit graph

14 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
mspo
390bc14dc3 if linux, use , else use gsed 2013-06-14 18:19:17 +00:00
mspo
7b6dc5d0bf fix build by using PREFIX/bin/gsed 2013-06-14 18:17:21 +00:00
wiz
d2ca14a3f1 Bump all packages for perl-5.18, that
a) refer 'perl' in their Makefile, or
b) have a directory name of p5-*, or
c) have any dependency on any p5-* package

Like last time, where this caused no complaints.
2013-05-31 12:39:57 +00:00
sbd
e5630f6cb7 On Linux there is no need to depend on coreutils gsed and patch.
So use the tools system for gsed and on Linux use the native cp and date
and if patch exits use it.

Bump PKGREVISION
2013-05-23 21:12:11 +00:00
asau
e1ab7079b6 Drop superfluous PKG_DESTDIR_SUPPORT, "user-destdir" is default these days. 2012-10-31 11:16:30 +00:00
wiz
8b5d49eb78 Bump all packages that use perl, or depend on a p5-* package, or
are called p5-*.

I hope that's all of them.
2012-10-03 21:53:53 +00:00
cheusov
6a13d2c1a0 Remove GNU_PROGRAM_PREFIX variable (discussed in pkgsrc-users@) 2012-05-29 22:58:52 +00:00
ahoka
81b74b65fe Update to version 0.48. 2010-11-22 09:32:24 +00:00
joerg
bacea7cad5 Remove @dirrm entries from PLISTs 2009-06-14 17:48:39 +00:00
jmmv
d3a2e64d62 Add user-destdir support. Per joerg@'s request. 2009-03-03 15:37:45 +00:00
bjs
d05fd8ed7e Add --without-rpmbuild to CONFIGURE_ARGS. Otherwise, the configure
script can detect it spuriously, and the installation phase will fail
during the PLIST check.

I would've added it as an option, but I do not know if quilt even
works with our ancient rpm package.

Bump rev (mostly for CHANGES).
2008-02-08 19:29:25 +00:00
apb
31a3fe5e08 Use a portable construct instead of "find ... -perm +111"; quiets
a build-time error message (which did not abort the build).

PKGREVISION = 1.
2008-01-08 08:28:58 +00:00
jmmv
6019f4ea25 This needs the gettext tools. Should fix build on NetBSD 3.1, in which the
po files weren't installed.
2007-07-28 07:48:52 +00:00
jmmv
033037c5ba Initial import of quilt, version 0.46:
Quilt is a set of scripts that allows to manage a series of patches by
keeping track of the changes each patch makes.  Patches can be applied,
un-applied, refreshed, etc.

The key philosophical concept is that your primary output is patches.
Not ".c" files, not ".h" files.  But patches.  So patches are the
first-class object here.

Quilt was originally based on Andrew Morton's patch scripts published on
the Linux kernel mailing list a while ago, but were heavily modified
since then.
2007-07-09 19:46:36 +00:00