Commit graph

11 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
martti
f928be280d COMMENT should start with a capital letter. 2003-07-21 16:56:41 +00:00
grant
0155927c43 s/netbsd.org/NetBSD.org/ 2003-07-17 21:41:05 +00:00
jschauma
e366d0c694 Use tech-pkg@ in favor of packages@ as MAINTAINER for orphaned packages.
Should anybody feel like they could be the maintainer for any of thewe packages,
please adjust.
2003-06-02 01:15:31 +00:00
seb
e8328761a2 Use buildlink2. Use perl5/module.mk. 2002-10-27 20:48:55 +00:00
martti
a8e7f2529f Updated p5-Mail-Audit to 2.0 (provided by Shell Hung in pkg/14919)
Changes :
- Mail::Audit now work with Exchange
- Documentation fixed
- bug fixed for the procmail conversion script
2001-12-12 14:39:59 +00:00
jlam
cc4128d97e Buildlinkify, in the sense that only the perl headers are found in
${PREFIX} -- everything else is pickup up from ${BUILDLINK_DIR}.
2001-11-26 06:49:36 +00:00
zuntum
c72c1cf5f9 Move pkg/ files into package's toplevel directory 2001-11-01 00:57:41 +00:00
veego
63ad910dee SVR4 packages have a limit of 9 chars for a package name.
The automatic truncation in gensolpkg doesn't work for packages which
have the same package name for the first 5-6 chars.
e.g. amanda-server and amanda-client would be named amanda and amanda.
Now, we add a SVR4_PKGNAME and use amacl for amanda-client and amase for
amanda-server.
All svr4 packages also have a vendor tag, so we have to reserve some chars
for this tag, which is normaly 3 or 4 chars. Thats why we can only use 6
or 5 chars for SVR4_PKGNAME. I used 5 for all the packages, to give the
vendor tag enough room.
All p5-* packages and a few other packages have now a SVR4_PKGNAME.
2001-10-18 15:20:01 +00:00
jlam
0cec9f63e0 Change foo-* dependencies into foo-[0-9]* dependencies so we match only
those packages with a base package name of "foo".
2001-09-27 07:36:12 +00:00
jlam
70920f97b6 Whitespace changes. 2001-09-27 07:34:00 +00:00
jlam
ef53140e2c p5-Mail-Audit - perl5 module for filtering mail
`Mail::Audit' was inspired by Tom Christiansen's audit_mail and
deliverlib programs. It allows a piece of email to be logged, examined,
accepted into a mailbox, filtered, resent elsewhere, rejected, and so
on. It's designed to allow you to easily create filter programs to stick
in a .forward file or similar.

Provided in pkg/13848 by Sen Nagata <sen@eccosys.com>.
2001-09-27 05:08:37 +00:00