This file is from libtool-1.x, which is not in pkgsrc any longer
(using libtool-2.x since 2009). Also, it was only used for packages
using autoconf-2.13 AND libtool; I found three packages in pkgsrc with
that combination, and all of them still build on NetBSD-6.99.24/amd64
after this change.
so that they are correctly calculated as independent.
This avoids issues in bulk builds where the package version was taking
precedence and causing the wrong user package to be depended upon.
Always use xorg-cf-files and imake from pkgsrc, replacing xpkgwedge.
Always install man pages, not cat pages when using imake.
Unify the various imake PLIST variables in preparation for dropping.
Adjust xbattbar for the new expectations.
Based on the responses I'm going to switch the default X11_TYPE to
be modular, and override in platform/*.mk files as required. The
new values will be:
Changed - from native to modular
- FreeBSD
- FreeMiNT
- Linux
Changed - older versions switched from native to modular
- NetBSD - native for NetBSD-4 and later
Native (unchanged) - should probably be switched to modular
- AIX
- BSDOS
- IRIX
- Interix
- MirBSD
- UnixWare
Native (unchanged)
- Darwin - for Leopard (10.5) and later
- OpenBSD.mk
- SunOS.mk
Modular (unchanged)
- DragonFly
- HPUX
- Haiku
- OSF1
I'd like to encourage anyone using X11 apps on any platforms other
than NetBSD, Darwin, DragonFly, FreeBSD, Linux, FreeMiNT, HPUX,
Haiku or OSF1 to speak up, whether they are happy with native or
having to set modular.
* Introduce USE_GAMESGROUP, which causes the games user and group to
be made available.
* Retain SETGIDGAME as an alias for USE_GAMESGROUP. Describe it as
deprecated.
* Always define GAMES_USER, GAMES_GROUP, GAMEMODE, GAMEDIRMODE, and
GAMEDATAMODE, regardless of whether USE_GAMESGROUP is turned on or not.
* Define these variables in defaults/mk.conf instead of separately in
every platform/*.mk file. The definitions used to be the same for each
of these platforms anyway, except for some where they were randomly
missing or commented out for no clear reason, leading to broken game
packages.
* Handle all these variables properly when unprivileged.
* Update the comments/documentation for these variables.
* Describe GAMEOWN and GAMEGRP as deprecated. These need to be
retained as aliases for GAMES_USER and GAMES_GROUP respectively for
supporting packages that use bsd.*.mk but should otherwise not be
used.
* Add GAMEDATA_PERMS and GAMEDIR_PERMS using GAMEDATAMODE and
GAMEDIRMODE respectively.
* Fix a bug I noticed that was improperly mixing the "games" group
and "games" user.
Things this does *not* do:
- get rid of GAMES_USER, for which there should ultimately be no need.
- move the declaration/documentation/default value of USE_GAMESGROUP
to a suitable place. (It is currently where SETGIDGAME was, which is
suboptimal.)
- touch any of the games, all of which need updating with at least
s/SETGIDGAME/USE_GAMESGROUP/ and probably more.
- update the guide to explain how to handle games properly.
Also, it would be nice if using GAMES_GROUP without setting
USE_GAMESGROUP=yes caused an error but as far as I know there isn't
any particularly good way to arrange this right now.
Note that these changes may alter the build/install behavior of broken
game packages, e.g. some may silently become setgid when they weren't
before or things like that. If you run into any of this file a PR.
While one might arguably bump the PKGREVISION of all games or other
packages using any of these variables as a precaution, that seems like
a bad idea. Instead, I think I will be bumping each game once it
itself has been fixed up to do everything the right way.
files. These variables are currently usable if ${SETGIDGAME} == yes.
These variables should be used when describing ownership of files
and directories to the pkginstall framework, e.g.
SPECIAL_PERMS= bin/foogame ${GAMES_USER} ${GAMES_GROUP} 2555
+ Rename SETGID_GAME_PERMS to SETGID_GAMES_PERMS because the default
group name is "games".
+ Define SETGID_GAMES_PERMS in terms of GAMES_USER and GAMES_GROUP so
that these names are protected from the normal flow of unprivileged.mk.
This fixes the +INSTALL scripts in "user-destdir" packages to
correctly refer to the games:games instead of the user:group of the
user that built the packages.
usually the same on the supported platforms.
The reason for having duplicate code in these files is to make it easier
to port pkgsrc to a new platform: You just have to copy one of the
existing platform files and edit the values in it. With some values
factored out, you would have to look at one more file.
Pointed out by agc@.
platforms, mainly because it wouldn't have made sense to document the
variables in one of those files, but they need to be documented
somewhere.
Added the file defaults.mk, which now serves as the reference document
which provides useful default values and _explains_ the variables.
it for plurals support, but that is already handled correctly (FSVO
"correctly") by the pkgsrc/mk/tools/msgfmt.sh script.
Also remove _USE_GNU_GETTEXT definitions from pkgsrc/mk/platform/*.mk
files as that value has been unused by pkgsrc for quite some time
(going back several branches).
for manipulating PLISTs. This module is not used by default pending
more widespread testing -- currently the variable _USE_PLIST_MODULE
must be defined in /etc/mk.conf to enable its use.
The main features of the new PLIST module are:
(1) Splits out the PLIST-handling code from bsd.pkg.mk into a
separate "plist" module.
(2) Splits out giant, multi-line awk scripts stored in make
variables into separate awk scripts that may be joined
together to post-process PLISTs. Each of these awk scripts
consolidates the processing for one set of files, e.g.,
man pages, info pages, etc., and is more easily commented
than a make variable.
(3) Splits out the print-PLIST code from the regular PLIST code
since they have no common pieces (print-plist.mk vs.
plist.mk).
(4) Completely re-implements the shared-library handling to be
more efficient. Along the way, this also fixes a problem
for Mac OS X users where the PLISTs incorrectly contained
absolute paths.
(5) Completely re-implements the info-file handling so that we
can migrate from INFO_FILES definitions to just adding
info/foo.info entries in the static PLISTs.
(6) Adds commented-out support for automatically compressed or
decompressed info page entries based on the value of MANZ.
These changes will be activated after texinfo.mk has been
replaced by something that is built using the more modern
primitives now available in pkgsrc.
(7) Move the file compression logic into a separate script
"doc-compress" that compresses or decompresses files while
minding symlinks. This script is now called by bsd.pkg.mk
to do the "autmoatic man page handling". In the future,
it will also handle the "automatic info page handling" and
possible others.
In general, the idea is to move stuff out of the Makefiles and into
separate files where we don't need to worry about quoting rules
and where each file can have a separate history of commits. This
simplifies the makefile logic (especially in terms of readability)
and also simplifies maintenance of the code.
Fix major problem brought to the surface by buildlink3 on Interix. For C++
or F77 libraries only, the soname did not always make it into the final
binary, resulting in runtime link failures in some cases and runtime linking
with a missing major version in others.
This is unfortunately a flag day for Interix + pkgsrc. Identifying all the
PKGREVISIONs normally requiring a bump is a little too unwieldy. However,
existing binaries not experiencing the runtime link failure will continue
to run, but will be linking against the unversioned ".so" at runtime until
the binaries have been rebuilt.
While here, fix a couple wrong assumptions in the libtool config for
Interix. shlibvar_overrides_runpath should have been "no", and
hardcode_direct should have been "yes".
blocks can override it without running the commands at all.
Move Interix [LOWER_]OS_VERSION speedup hack into bsd.prefs.mk, since it
must happen early at runtime.
While here, speed up the OS_VERSION calculation slightly for OSF1.
some platforms, which includes all non-ELFs and many ELF-like platforms
(that still use a.out naming conventions).
Since a branch is coming, bump the version in a blanket rather than per
platform.
not on by default). Separate out the variable defintions that are
now made by the new tools framework. Some of the trickier platforms
(AIX, IRIX, Interix, OSF1) still need more work.
a mistake to include "GZIP" as an ${OPSYS}-specific variable as there
is nothing ${OPSYS}-specific there to tune. Define GZIP in
defaults/mk.conf instead, and remove the definition from each of the
existing platform/${OPSYS}.mk files.
because pkginstall encodes it into its scripts. sigh.
Hack around this. For bulk builds on Interix only, use gsort for "tflat";
use the system-supplied sort for the rest of the build.