and ${CFLAGS}. This fixes the build of net/djbdns, as well as any
other of these packages passing down PKG_SYSCONFDIR via CFLAGS, as
well as being more generally correct for arbitrary user-defined
CFLAGS. Suggested by jlam.
For consistency across djbware in pkgsrc:
* In math/djbfft's and sysutils/daemontools's do-configure targets,
remove leading @ from ${ECHO} lines; from the former, also remove
unneeded single quotes from one such line.
* Rename net/publicfile's pre-build and sysutils/service-config's
post-patch targets to do-configure.
* In sysutils/checkpassword's do-configure target, reorder creation
of conf-cc, conf-ld, and conf-home.
All of the affected packages have been verified to compile.
XXX These packages probably have enough build goo in common to
XXX warrant an mk/djbware.mk. I'll investigate this post-freeze.
definitions of LOCALBASE and NO_MTREE. This requires either the
latest qmail package or netqmail. Add needed dependencies on
daemontools and ucspi-tcp also. Rename post-patch to do-configure.
Set ALL_TARGET explicitly. Set USE_BUILDLINK3=yes. Update HOMEPAGE.
Take MAINTAINER. Bump PKGREVISION.
The only change in this version is:
o rename qmail-conf to qmail-delivery-conf, so now it's clear
what it actually does
Update provided by Sen Nagata <sen_ml@eccosys.com> in private mail.
foo-* to foo-[0-9]*. This is to cause the dependencies to match only the
packages whose base package name is "foo", and not those named "foo-bar".
A concrete example is p5-Net-* matching p5-Net-DNS as well as p5-Net. Also
change dependency examples in Packages.txt to reflect this.
qmail-conf is a collection of tools for setting up various qmail services.
They are like *-conf programs in djbdns.
With qmail-conf, for example, setting up a minimal SMTP service takes
the following four steps:
qmail-smtpd-conf qmaild qmaill /var/qmail/service/smtpd
cd /var/qmail/service/smtpd
make
ln -s /var/qmail/service/smtpd /service
qmail-conf assumes that (recent versions of) daemontools and ucspi-tcp have
already been installed. It also assumes that svscan is already running.
qmail-conf tries to provide reasonable defaults: it avoids DNS reverse lookups;
it avoids IDENT lookups; it lets TCP connection attempts be logged with
multilog; and for POP3 and QMQP, connection attempts are denied unless you
explicitly authorize and for POP3 and QMQP, connection attempts are denied
unless you explicitly authorize and for POP3 and QMQP, connection attempts
are denied unless you explicitly authorize and for POP3 and QMQP,
connection attempts are denied unless you explicitly authorize your clients.