Automatic conversion of the NetBSD pkgsrc CVS module, use with care
fetchmail-5.4.4 (Sun Jul 23 15:56:16 EDT 2000), 19172 lines: * Guenther H. Leber's fix to show expunge parameters for POP3 in fetchmail -V. * Richard Gooch's fixes to use sigation(2) in sink.c and daemon.c * Petr Kristof's fix for sslcert configuration in fetchmailconf. * Jiri Pavolvsky's updated cs.po. * Cyrille Lefevre <clefevre@citeweb.net>'s patch for IPV6, resolving FreeBSD Problem Report ports/19996. * Added John Summerfield's pop2test to contrib. * In the fetchmail RPM spec, stop compressing the man pages. Turns out rpm-4.0 does a find(1) over the stuff to be installed and gzip(1)s the manpages it finds. This gets messed up by the explicit symlink among manpages in the spec file, which rpm redoes and gets all wrong. * Added Antoine Beaupre's dropdelivered option. fetchmail-5.4.3 (Sun Jul 2 14:24:28 EDT 2000), 19080 lines: * Fixed Debian bug #63667, fetchmailconf: doesn't write .fetchmailrc properly. * RFC2177 IDLE should now be done even when there are no messages. * Joerg Plate's SSL typo fix. * Try to limit the damage bad UIDL handling can do by refusing to mess with the UIDL state if there has been an error. * Better isafile test -- bizarrely enough, Linux ptys have S_ISBLK. * Includes for SSL now use the openssl directory, which has been standard since OpenSSL 0.9.3. If this breaks your build, upgrade your SSL. fetchmail-5.4.2 (Wed Jun 28 07:21:04 EDT 2000), 19069 lines: * Julian Haight's fix for his 5.4.1 patch, which created a potential memory leak. * Minor bug fixes for SSL by Wolfram Kleff. * Be more clever about when we suppress progress dots. fetchmail-5.4.1 (Tue Jun 6 23:24:22 EDT 2000), 19051 lines: * Julian Haight added support for arbitrary SMTP RCPT TO: control using: --smtpname user@host. Should be useful for sites running multiple virtual domains without local users, such as a cyrus IMAP installation. * Julian Haight added hostaddr reporting in the "Received: from" clause. * NT material added to FAQ item O9. * Commented out the socket-shutdown code that was causing mystery hangs under Red Hat 6.2. We can live with a socket leak (assuming it comes back) nmore easily than we can live with fetchmail getting wedged in place. * Werner Almesberger <almesber@lrc.epfl.ch> sent minor bug fixes for BSMTP. fetchmail-5.4.0 (Sat May 13 18:24:21 EDT 2000), 18977 lines: * Matthias Scheler's fix for SSL under IPV6 * Added FAQ material on SSL's "RPNG not seeded" message and on ssh tunnelling. * Resolved Debian bug #63667. |
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Makefile | ||
Packages.txt | ||
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README |
$NetBSD: README,v 1.11 2000/07/23 18:02:33 fredb Exp $ Welcome to the NetBSD Packages Collection ========================================= In brief, the NetBSD Packages Collection is a set of software utilities and libraries which have been ported to NetBSD. The packages collection software can retrieve the software from its home site, assuming you are connected in some way to the Internet, verify its integrity, apply any patches, configure the software for NetBSD, and build it. Any prerequisite software will also be built and installed for you. Installation and de-installation of software is managed by the packaging utilities. The packages collection is made into a tar_file every week: ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-current/tar_files/pkgsrc.tar.gz and you can sup the pkgsrc tree using the `pkgsrc' name for the collection. The pkgsrc tree is laid out in various categories, and, within that, the various packages themselves. You need to have root privileges to install packages. We are looking at ways to remove this restriction. + To install a package on your system, you need to change into the directory of the package, and type "make install". + If you've made a mistake, and decided that you don't want that package on your system, then type "pkg_delete <pkg-name>", or "make deinstall" while in the directory for the package. + To find out all the packages that you have installed on your system, type "pkg_info". + To remove the work directory, type "make clean", and "make clean-depends" will clean up any working directories for other packages that are built in the process of making your package. + Optionally, you can periodically run "make clean" from the top level pkgsrc directory. This will delete extracted and built files, but will not affect the retreived source sets in pkgsrc/distfiles. + You can set variables to customise the behaviour (where packages are installed, various options for individual packages etc), by setting variables in /etc/mk.conf. The pkgsrc/mk/mk.conf.example file provides some examples for customisation. The best way to find out what packages are in the collection is to move to the top-level pkgsrc directory (this will usually be /usr/pkgsrc), and type "make readme". This will create a file called README.html in the top-level pkgsrc directory, and also in all category and package directories. You can then see what packages are available, along with a short (one-line) comment about the function of the package, and a pointer to a fuller description, by using a browser like lynx (see pkgsrc/www/lynx) or Mozilla (pkgsrc/www/mozilla), or Communicator. This is also available online as ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/packages/pkgsrc/README.html. Another way to find out what packages are in the collection is to move to the top-level pkgsrc directory and type "make index". This will create pkgsrc/INDEX which can be viewed via "make print-index | more". You can also search for particular packages or keywords via "make search key=<somekeyword>". It is also possible to use the packaging software to install pre-compiled binary packages by typing "pkg_add <URL-of-binary-pkg>". To see what binary packages are available, see: ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/packages/<release>/<arch>/All/ where <release> is the NetBSD release, and <arch> is the hardware architecture. One limitation of using binary packages provided from ftp.netbsd.org is that all mk.conf options were set to the defaults at compile time. LOCALBASE, in particular, defaults to /usr/pkg, so non-X binaries will be installed in /usr/pkg/bin, man pages will be installed in /usr/pkg/man... When a packaged tool has major compile time choices, such as support for multiple graphic toolkit libraries, the different options may be available as separate packages. For more information on the packages collection see the file Packages.txt where you found this README, or in your top-level pkgsrc directory.