1.2.2:
Alan Coopersmith (3):
spec: Fix section titles/nesting
specs: change othercredit tags to author tags
scrnsaverproto 1.2.2
Gaetan Nadon (9):
config: HTML file generation: use the installed copy of xorg.css
Documentation: add Docbook external references support
Install target dbs alongside generated documents
Install xml versions of specs even if HAVE_XMLTO is false
docbook.am: global maintenance update - entities, images and olinking
docbook.am: embed css styles inside the HTML HEAD element
docs: remove <productnumber> which is not used by default
docs: use the &fullrelvers; entity to set X11 release information
specs: fix markup for single license dual holder
Matt Dew (3):
add id attributes to funcsynopsis to allow other docs to olink to them.
Fix id attributes, linkend and olinks
informaltable cleanup
1.2.1:
Release features: Protocol spec moved from xorg-docs, converted to DocBook
Packaging-only update, no changes to the protocol itself since version
1.1.0. Notably is the removal of the scrnsaver.h header which was moved to
the libXScrnSaver module.
This changes the buildlink3.mk files to use an include guard for the
recursive include. The use of BUILDLINK_DEPTH, BUILDLINK_DEPENDS,
BUILDLINK_PACKAGES and BUILDLINK_ORDER is handled by a single new
variable BUILDLINK_TREE. Each buildlink3.mk file adds a pair of
enter/exit marker, which can be used to reconstruct the tree and
to determine first level includes. Avoiding := for large variables
(BUILDLINK_ORDER) speeds up parse time as += has linear complexity.
The include guard reduces system time by avoiding reading files over and
over again. For complex packages this reduces both %user and %sys time to
half of the former time.
X.Org found in NetBSD-current.
Thanks a lot to all who helped, especially Matthias Scheler who did
repeated tests on Mac OS X and older versions of NetBSD to make sure the
support for those platforms wouldn't be broken (or at least, not fatally,
as I would still expect a few hiccups here and there, because there is
only so much one can test in such limited time).
On the infrastructure side, this branch brings pkgconfig-builtin.mk, in
order to write very easily new builtin.mk files. It can actually handle
more than just pkgconfig files, but it will provide a version if it finds
such a file. x11.builtin.mk has also been made more useful and now all
existing (and future!) native-X11-related builtin.mk files should include
it.