The find-prefix infrastructure was required in a pkgviews world where
packages installed from pkgsrc could have different installation
prefixes, and this was a way for a dependency prefix to be determined.
Now that pkgviews has been removed there is no longer any need for the
overhead of this infrastructure. Instead we use BUILDLINK_PREFIX.pkg
for dependencies pulled in via buildlink, or LOCALBASE/PREFIX where the
dependency is coming from pkgsrc.
Provides a reasonable performance win due to the reduction of `pkg_info
-qp` calls, some of which were redundant anyway as they were duplicating
the same information provided by BUILDLINK_PREFIX.pkg.
to NetBSD 6.1)
introduce compat61 (and compat61-x11 with it) as a backward compatibility
package to NetBSD 7
add compat61* to mk/emulator/netbsd-compat.mk and emulators/Makefile
some sort of version for the binary compat packages might have been
useful, maybe abusing the DIST_SUBDIR? compat61 is likely to change
if/when NetBSD 6.2 is released
the problem is either situational (e.g. the various RESTRICTED-like
cases) or unfixable in pkgsrc (no pthreads, ipv6, etc. on platform).
Conversely, if the wrong version of mysql is installed, that's a
PKG_FAIL_REASON.
Build depends are target packages that are needed at build-time for,
e.g., static libraries to link against, header files to include, &c.
Tool depends are native packages that are needed at build-time for,
e.g., compilers/linkers/&c. to run.
ok agc
* gdk-pixbuf and gtk are not used anywhere in pkgsrc and suse>10.0 does not
support them.
* vmware module was used for emulators/vmware* packages, but it had been removed
from pkgsrc.
"native" it's "builtin".
So if Linux emulation is wanted on a Linux system set EMUL_TYPE.linux to
"native" if the EMUL_ARCH and MACHINE_ARCH are the same, otherwise set it
to "none".
If the EMUL_TYPE is 'none' disable the package by setting NOT_FOR_PLATFORM
to this platform.
If someone wants to use Linux 32bit "builtin" emulation they should ensure
that the native 32bit library packages that are needed are installed
(e.g. libc6-i386 ... ) and put "EMUL_TYPE.linux=builtin" in mk.conf.
and netbsd32_compat40 packages. The compat40 packages are currently
built by comparing the 4.0 release against the 20071230 version of
HEAD.
Commit approved by <agc>.
Remember .include "foo.mk" is looked for (first) in the directory that
contains the makefile being processed (like in C), so remove all the
${.PARSEDIR} and ../ sequences that just cause grief.
of an emulated operating system. Instead of proliferating things like
SUSE_VERSION_REQD, NETBSD_VERSION_REQD, SOLARIS_VERSION_REQD, etc., a
package can say:
EMUL_REQD= suse>=9.1 netbsd>=2.0 solaris>=10
all in one, succinct line.
a separate emulator-opsys.mk file.
The emulator-opsys.mk file defines EMUL_DISTRO and the various *EMUL*DIR*
variables, as well as any opsys-specific variables.
Include this file within compat_netbsd/Makefile.common so that the
*EXEC_FMT variables (defined by the compat*/emulator.mk files) are
defined. This fixes the build of compat* packages.
XXX emulator-opsys.mk will go away in the near future as we do more
XXX appropriate information hiding.
matches the native operating system. Use it in place of checking
whether EMUL_DISTRO matches "native-*" as EMUL_DISTRO is no longer
defined after bsd.prefs.mk is included.
This should fix PR pkg/36823 by Robert Elz.
pkgsrc/emulator/compat* and pkgsrc/emulator/netbsd32_compat* packages
to provide the necessary shared libraries to run dynamically linked
NetBSD binaries from the days of yore.
* Add some additional compat* packages for completeness:
compat15, compat20, compat30
* Modify the compat* packages so that "compatNM" only provides files
that aren't in "NetBSD-N.(M+1)". For example, compat12 only provides
files that don't exist in NetBSD-1.3.x, compat13 only provides files
that don't exist in NetBSD-1.4.x, etc.
As a result, if you are running NetBSD-3.0/alpha and want to run a
1.3 dynamically linked binary, there is an automatic dependency
chain that causes the following packages to be installed:
compat13, compat14, compat15, compat16, compat20
There are some deviations from this dependency chain on platforms
that have changed executable formats, e.g. i386, m68, sparc, etc.
However, in general pkgsrc will require that you have the necessary
COMPAT_* options in your kernel to match the installed compat*
packages. This restriction is an artificial one imposed by pkgsrc,
but allows for a single set of distfiles to be used on all versions
of NetBSD.
* Provide compat* package support for every supported architecture
of NetBSD. Verily, it is now possible to run 1.2 binaries on
NetBSD-1.5.3/pc532 by installing the compat12 package from pkgsrc.
Rejoice, one and all!
* The netbsd32_compat* packages mirror the corresponding compat*
packages for use by sparc64 and x86_64 to allow running 32-bit
binaries with COMPAT_NETBSD32 kernel support. The "extras" packages
supply the additional shared libraries from the corresponding release
of NetBSD so that the set of files in /emul/netbsd32 will be complete.
* pkgsrc/emulators/compat_netbsd contains infrastructure files shared
by all of the compat* packages.