a mistake to include "GZIP" as an ${OPSYS}-specific variable as there
is nothing ${OPSYS}-specific there to tune. Define GZIP in
defaults/mk.conf instead, and remove the definition from each of the
existing platform/${OPSYS}.mk files.
tracked the Cyrus SASL 1.5.x releases, which are no longer maintained.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.
within NetBSD-current's bsd.own.mk, which conflicts with its usage in
pkgsrc. The package that use USE_PAM have been converted to use the
bsd.options.mk framework. This should fix PR pkg/29257.
mk/apache.mk and references to it in mk/defaults/mk.conf.
It is now only referenced in some CONFLICTS specifications and some
dependencies specifications (for www/ap-dav and www/ap-jserv; should theses be
removed too?)
* Add FETCH_OUTPUT_ARGS (new option, defaults to "-o" with NetBSD's ftp(1))
* Use FETCH_OUTPUT_ARGS to move the file transfer to a temporary name
on ${DISTDIR}/${DIST_SUBDIR} with extension ".temp"
* If temporary file matches the checksum recorded in distinfo, move it
to the original name (removing temp file)
For example, if you want to use PKG_RESUME_TRANSFERS with wget
(pkgsrc/net/wget), the following vars should be defined in mk.conf:
FETCH_CMD=wget
FETCH_RESUME_ARGS=-c
FETCH_OUTPUT_ARGS=-O
No need to set these vars when using defaults (NetBSD's ftp(1))
Looks like that cannot we use render/randrext builtin versions for
meta-pkgs/xorg, because of missing .pc files required to build Xrender
and friends, remove them from here.
Closes PR pkg/27129 by Cristopher Richards, thanks for the info, I thought
they were installed by xorg-libs... (!)
as it's only used internally by bsd.prefs.mk.
* Make _PKGSRCDIR a public variable by renaming it to PKGSRCDIR.
Also, generate its value from ${_PKGSRC_TOPDIR} so it's less fragile
than the old method of stripping off the last two components of
${.CURDIR}. PKGSRCDIR may now be used after bsd.prefs.mk is defined.
* Change all references to _PKGSRCDIR to PKGSRCDIR.
(1) defs.${OPSYS}.mk --> platform/${OPSYS}.mk.
The "platform" subdirectory is where all of the ${OPSYS}-specific
infrastructure logic should reside.
(2) bsd.pkg.defaults.mk --> defaults/mk.conf
bsd.pkg.obsolete.mk --> defaults/obsolete.mk
Renaming bsd.pkg.defaults.mk to defaults/mk.conf is to mimic the way
that NetBSD has /etc/rc.conf as well as /etc/defaults/rc.conf, where
the latter is a full list of user-settable variables, and the two
files share the same name to reinforce the fact /etc/defaults/rc.conf
can be directly copied in place as /etc/rc.conf. This is the same
relationship shared by defaults/mk.conf and /etc/mk.conf.