Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
|
Changes in 2.03 (30 Apr 2008)
* Updated the ELF assembler sources to mark the stack as non-executable.
* Fixed a HP-UX 11 build issue with Itanium in ILP32 mode.
* Updated the configure system.
|
|
|
|
|
|
*sigh* and we run autoconf because?
|
|
|
|
and add a new helper target and script, "show-buildlink3", that outputs
a listing of the buildlink3.mk files included as well as the depth at
which they are included.
For example, "make show-buildlink3" in fonts/Xft2 displays:
zlib
fontconfig
iconv
zlib
freetype2
expat
freetype2
Xrender
renderproto
|
|
of the order in which buildlink3.mk files are (recursively) included
by a package Makefile.
|
|
that they look nicer.
|
|
RECOMMENDED is removed. It becomes ABI_DEPENDS.
BUILDLINK_RECOMMENDED.foo becomes BUILDLINK_ABI_DEPENDS.foo.
BUILDLINK_DEPENDS.foo becomes BUILDLINK_API_DEPENDS.foo.
BUILDLINK_DEPENDS does not change.
IGNORE_RECOMMENDED (which defaulted to "no") becomes USE_ABI_DEPENDS
which defaults to "yes".
Added to obsolete.mk checking for IGNORE_RECOMMENDED.
I did not manually go through and fix any aesthetic tab/spacing issues.
I have tested the above patch on DragonFly building and packaging
subversion and pkglint and their many dependencies.
I have also tested USE_ABI_DEPENDS=no on my NetBSD workstation (where I
have used IGNORE_RECOMMENDED for a long time). I have been an active user
of IGNORE_RECOMMENDED since it was available.
As suggested, I removed the documentation sentences suggesting bumping for
"security" issues.
As discussed on tech-pkg.
I will commit to revbump, pkglint, pkg_install, createbuildlink separately.
Note that if you use wip, it will fail! I will commit to pkgsrc-wip
later (within day).
|
|
developer is officially maintaining the package.
The rationale for changing this from "tech-pkg" to "pkgsrc-users" is
that it implies that any user can try to maintain the package (by
submitting patches to the mailing list). Since the folks most likely
to care about the package are the folks that want to use it or are
already using it, this would leverage the energy of users who aren't
developers.
|
|
Changes in 2.02 (17 Oct 2005)
* Updated the build and Autoconf scripts to fix some reported
compilation problems.
|
|
|
|
LZO is a portable lossless data compression library written in ANSI
C. It offers pretty fast compression and very fast decompression.
Decompression requires no memory.
In addition there are slower compression levels achieving a quite
competitive compression ratio while still decompressing at this
very high speed.
The LZO algorithms and implementations are copyrighted OpenSource
distributed under the GNU General Public License.
|