to address issues with NetBSD-6(and earlier)'s fontconfig not being
new enough for pango.
While doing that, also bump freetype2 dependency to current pkgsrc
version.
Suggested by tron in PR 47882
This changes the buildlink3.mk files to use an include guard for the
recursive include. The use of BUILDLINK_DEPTH, BUILDLINK_DEPENDS,
BUILDLINK_PACKAGES and BUILDLINK_ORDER is handled by a single new
variable BUILDLINK_TREE. Each buildlink3.mk file adds a pair of
enter/exit marker, which can be used to reconstruct the tree and
to determine first level includes. Avoiding := for large variables
(BUILDLINK_ORDER) speeds up parse time as += has linear complexity.
The include guard reduces system time by avoiding reading files over and
over again. For complex packages this reduces both %user and %sys time to
half of the former time.
and add a new helper target and script, "show-buildlink3", that outputs
a listing of the buildlink3.mk files included as well as the depth at
which they are included.
For example, "make show-buildlink3" in fonts/Xft2 displays:
zlib
fontconfig
iconv
zlib
freetype2
expat
freetype2
Xrender
renderproto
RECOMMENDED is removed. It becomes ABI_DEPENDS.
BUILDLINK_RECOMMENDED.foo becomes BUILDLINK_ABI_DEPENDS.foo.
BUILDLINK_DEPENDS.foo becomes BUILDLINK_API_DEPENDS.foo.
BUILDLINK_DEPENDS does not change.
IGNORE_RECOMMENDED (which defaulted to "no") becomes USE_ABI_DEPENDS
which defaults to "yes".
Added to obsolete.mk checking for IGNORE_RECOMMENDED.
I did not manually go through and fix any aesthetic tab/spacing issues.
I have tested the above patch on DragonFly building and packaging
subversion and pkglint and their many dependencies.
I have also tested USE_ABI_DEPENDS=no on my NetBSD workstation (where I
have used IGNORE_RECOMMENDED for a long time). I have been an active user
of IGNORE_RECOMMENDED since it was available.
As suggested, I removed the documentation sentences suggesting bumping for
"security" issues.
As discussed on tech-pkg.
I will commit to revbump, pkglint, pkg_install, createbuildlink separately.
Note that if you use wip, it will fail! I will commit to pkgsrc-wip
later (within day).
caches variable definitions that were computed by make. These variables
are specified by listing them in MAKE_VARS, e.g.,
.if !defined(FOO)
FOO!= very_time_consuming_command
.endif
MAKE_VARS+= FOO
bsd.pkg.mk will include only the one generated during the most recent
phase. A particular phase's makevars.mk file consists of variable
definitions that are a superset of all of the ones produced in previous
phases of the build.
The caching is useful because bsd.pkg.mk invokes make recursively,
which in the example above has the potential to run the very time-consuming
command each time unless we cause FOO to be defined for the sub-make
processes. We don't cache via MAKE_FLAGS because MAKE_FLAGS isn't
consistently applied to every invocation of make, and also because
MAKE_FLAGS can overflow the maximum length of a make variable very
quickly if we add many values to it.
One important and desirable property of variables cached via MAKE_VARS
is that they only apply to the current package, and not to any
dependencies whose builds may have been triggered by the current
package.
The makevars.mk files are generated by new targets fetch-vars,
extract-vars, patch-vars, etc., and these targets are built during
the corresponding real-* target to ensure that they are being invoked
with PKG_PHASE set to the proper value.
Also, remove the variables cache file that bsd.wrapper.mk was generating
since the new makevars.mk files provide the same functionality at a
higher level. Change all WRAPPER_VARS definitions that were used by
the old wrapper-phase cache file into MAKE_VARS definitions.
package because PKG_OPTION.<pkg> could contain negative options, which
are never part of PKG_OPTIONS. Instead, use the show-var target to
display the value. We cache it in WRAPPER_VARS and in MAKE_FLAGS to
prevent reinvoking the show-var target recursively.
tracked the Cyrus SASL 1.5.x releases, which are no longer maintained.
Adjust packages to use security/cyrus-sasl2 instead for SASL support.
This closes PR pkg/28218 and PR pkg/29736.
Highlights at a glance
* Text-to-speech system with support built into Konqueror, Kate, KPDF
and the standalone application KSayIt
* Support for text to speech synthesis is integrated with the desktop
* Completely redesigned, more flexible trash system
* Kicker with improved look and feel
* KPDF now enables you to select, copy & paste text and images from
PDFs, along with many other improvements
* Kontact supports now various groupware servers, including eGroupware,
GroupWise, Kolab, OpenGroupware.org and SLOX
* Kopete supports Novell Groupwise and Lotus Sametime and gets
integrated into Kontact
* DBUS/HAL support allows to keep dynamic device icons in media:/ and
on the desktop in sync with the state of all devices
* KHTML has improved standard support and now close to full support for
CSS 2.1 and the CSS 3 Selectors module
* Better synchronization between 2 PCs
* A new high contrast style and a complete monochrome icon set
* An icon effect to paint all icons in two chosen colors, converting
third party application icons into high contrast monochrome icons
* Akregator allows you to read news from your favourite RSS-enabled
websites in one application
* Juk has now an album cover management via Google Image Search
* KMail now stores passwords securely with KWallet
* SVG files can now be used as wallpapers
* KHTML plug-ins are now configurable, so the user can selectively
disable ones that are not used. This does not include Netscape-style
plug-ins. Netscape plug-in in CPU usage can be manually lowered, and
plug-ins are more stable.
* more than 6,500 bugs have been fixed
* more than 1,700 wishes have been fullfilled
* more than 80,000 contributions with several million lines of code and
documentation added or changed
in the process. (More information on tech-pkg.)
Bump PKGREVISION and BUILDLINK_DEPENDS of all packages using libtool and
installing .la files.
Bump PKGREVISION (only) of all packages depending directly on the above
via a buildlink3 include.