Do it for all packages that
* mention perl, or
* have a directory name starting with p5-*, or
* depend on a package starting with p5-
like last time, for 5.18, where this didn't lead to complaints.
Let me know if you have any this time.
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.
PKGLOCALEDIR and which install their locale files directly under
${PREFIX}/${PKGLOCALEDIR} and sort the PLIST file entries. From now
on, pkgsrc/mk/plist/plist-locale.awk will automatically handle
transforming the PLIST to refer to the correct locale directory.
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.
around at either build-time or at run-time is:
USE_TOOLS+= perl # build-time
USE_TOOLS+= perl:run # run-time
Also remove some places where perl5/buildlink3.mk was being included
by a package Makefile, but all that the package wanted was the Perl
executable.
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.
Changes since 0.6.0:
* add manpage
* fixed german, italian and french translation
* added spanish translation
* can resolv names
* added wol-bootptab: reads mac and host from bootptab file
* wol-dhcpdconf now reads mac and host
* fixed a parsing bug in wol-dhcpdconf
* -h and --host is an alias for -i
* /etc/ethers parsing support -> you now can specify ip-addresses and
hostnames on the commandline
* fixed -f pathname bug
* enhanced documentation
* debianized package
* wol.spec for rpm building
wol implements Wake On LAN functionality in a small program. It wakes
up hardware that is Magic Packet (tm) compliant. Consider you have a
sleeping or turned-off computer and you want to remotely wake him up.
Just type wol MAC-ADDRESS and the host wakes up (OK, it will boot ;-).
This small utility was able to wake my PC that has Intel PRO/100+ NIC.
Provided by Juan RP <juan@xtraeme.dyndns.org> in PR#19575