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.
All library names listed by *.la files no longer need to be listed
in the PLIST, e.g., instead of:
lib/libfoo.a
lib/libfoo.la
lib/libfoo.so
lib/libfoo.so.0
lib/libfoo.so.0.1
one simply needs:
lib/libfoo.la
and bsd.pkg.mk will automatically ensure that the additional library
names are listed in the installed package +CONTENTS file.
Also make LIBTOOLIZE_PLIST default to "yes".
curses.buildlink2.mk. This was wrong because we _really_ do want to
express that we want _n_curses when we include the buildlink2.mk file.
We should have a better way to say that the NetBSD curses doesn't
quite work well enough. In fact, it's far better to depend on ncurses
by default, and exceptionally note when it's okay to use NetBSD curses
for specific packages. We will look into this again in the future.
It was using internals of ncurses data structures even though there's
an official API for this...
XXX: might need INCOMPAT_CURSES patterns for some older NetBSD versions,
but I don't know which ones, so I didn't add them.
Licq-core is a multi-threaded ICQ clone written mostly in C++. It
uses an extensive plugin system to manage many different functions.
The main gui is written using the Qt widget set. Licq is distributed
under GPL with some special QPL exceptions for Qt.
Several GUI plugins for console, Qt etc. are available as seperate
packages, licq-gui-console and licq-gui-qt.