update the list from the package's own build system (taken from
common/Imakefile) - this adds FreeBSD, and also OSF1 and IRIX.
Probably porting this package requires nothing besides flogging imake.
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.
(1) With gcc 4.5, cpp does not fold lines separated by a escaped
newline in the output. Therefore when nasd_rpcgen runs its rpc
definitions through cpp, what comes out contains syntax errors. The
parser then reports these with SIGSEGV. First fix the cpp plumbing to
use the cpp tool wrapper during build, and then have it use -traditional.
(2) On amd64, roughly half the build thinks it's actually i386. Patch
the other half to agree. This may not turn out to work, but it does
build instead of dumping out bizarre compile errors.
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.
The original tar file has trailing base64 checksums, so I have
repackaged the tar file for just now.
This is release 1.3 of the Parallel Data Laboratory NASD
software prototype. The release includes the NASD drive
prototype, the NASD-NFS filemanager, simple client APIs, a
regression-testing suite, sample programs, a snapshot of
Cheops (which is one implementation of aggregation over
multiple NASDs), and some basic documentation.