on DragonFly. Since that version is used e.g. as part of the file name
for python eggs, it makes handling easier to match normal pkgsrc
platform policy. Bump revisions of all Python packages.
it was broken because the delimeter , can appear in the RHS of the
sed(1) expression (think "-Wl,-R ..."), and it does nothing useful
because the patterns don't appear in the files.
bin/python wrapper. Bump their PKGREVISION to 1.
Also remove the python package. In order to preserve a similar behavior to
this one using the new framework, start by installing pkg_alternatives.
Then just open its manpage, scroll down to the EXAMPLES section, Applying
filters subsection, and follow the (rather short) directions given there.
* Add a db1.builtin.mk file that detects whether DB-1.85 functionality
exists in the base system, and remove the distinction between
"native" and the other Berkeley DB packages -- we now refer to
db[1234]. This paves the way for any future databases/db1 package.
* USE_DB185 shouldn't need to be set by any packages -- its correct
value is now automatically determined by bdb.buildlink3.mk depending
on whether we explicitly request db1 or not. By default, if you
include bdb.buildlink3.mk, you want DB-1.85 functionality and
USE_DB185 defaults to "yes", but if you explicitly remove db1 from
the list of acceptable DBs, then USE_DB185 defaults to "no".
* Set BDB_LIBS to the library options needed to link against the DB
library when bdb.buildlink3.mk is included.
* We only add the DB library to the linker command automatically if
we want DB-1.85 functionality; otherwise assume that the package
configure process can figure out how to probe for the correct
headers and libraries.
Edit package Makefiles to nuke redundant settings of USE_DB185.
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.
which are the full option names used to set rpath directives for the
linker and the compiler, respectively. In places were we are invoking
the linker, use "${LINKER_RPATH_FLAG} <path>", where the space is
inserted in case the flag is a word, e.g. -rpath. The default values
of *_RPATH_FLAG are set by the compiler/*.mk files, depending on the
compiler that you use. They may be overridden on a ${OPSYS}-specific
basis by setting _OPSYS_LINKER_RPATH_FLAG and _OPSYS_COMPILER_RPATH_FLAG,
respectively. Garbage-collect _OPSYS_RPATH_NAME and _COMPILER_LD_FLAG.
python20 to python20-2.0.1nb6
python21 to python21-2.1.3nb2
python21-pth to python21-2.1.3nb4
python22 to python22-2.2.3nb1
python22-pth to python22-2.2.3nb1
python23 to python23-2.3.3nb1
python23-pth to python23-2.3.3nb1
Makefiles simply need to use this value often, for better or for
worse.
(2) Create a new variable FIX_RPATH that lists variables that should
be cleansed of -R or -rpath values if ${_USE_RPATH} is "no". By
default, FIX_RPATH contains LIBS, X11_LDFLAGS, and LDFLAGS, and
additional variables may be appended from package Makefiles.
embedding friendly, as suggested in PR pkg/14520 by Jarkko Torppa
-having to touch Setup.in anyway, comment out the non-64-bit-clean
modules regularily and remove the Makefile magic which led to the
same effect
on any platform (we can make a separate pkg for it later)
-pull in a patch which used to be in devel/py-readline here because
it is Python version specific
-bump PKGREVISION