summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/mail/deliver/distinfo
AgeCommit message (Collapse)AuthorFilesLines
2015-11-03Add SHA512 digests for distfiles for mail categoryagc1-1/+2
Problems found locating distfiles: Package mutt: missing distfile patch-1.5.24.rr.compressed.gz Package p5-Email-Valid: missing distfile Email-Valid-1.198.tar.gz Package pine: missing distfile fancy.patch.gz Package postgrey: missing distfile targrey-0.31-postgrey-1.34.patch Package qmail: missing distfile badrcptto.patch Package qmail: missing distfile outgoingip.patch Package qmail: missing distfile qmail-1.03-realrcptto-2006.12.10.patch Package qmail: missing distfile qmail-smtpd-viruscan-1.3.patch Package thunderbird24: missing distfile enigmail-1.7.2.tar.gz Package thunderbird31: missing distfile enigmail-1.7.2.tar.gz Otherwise, existing SHA1 digests verified and found to be the same on the machine holding the existing distfiles (morden). All existing SHA1 digests retained for now as an audit trail.
2009-06-29Fix bulk build, while here convert to user-destdir.joerg1-2/+2
2006-10-28added support for IRIX 5schwarz1-2/+2
2006-06-21Remove conflicting declaration of malloc(), realloc(), and free(); includeminskim1-2/+2
stdlib.h instead.
2006-01-08Remove some more prototypes which should be used from the system headersjoerg1-1/+2
and which conflicted with them on DragonFly.
2005-02-24Add RMD160 digests.agc1-1/+2
2004-05-28Add patches from Jim Bernard to make this build on -current and fixwiz1-2/+6
a problem with basename(); bump PKGREVISION. Closes PR 20978 and PR 25733 by Jim Bernard.
2003-07-02Avoid hardcoding /usr/pkg in patch files.jmmv1-2/+2
2003-02-08include missing header to make this build on alpha.dmcmahill1-1/+2
2002-07-02Add RCS Id.wiz1-0/+1
2001-04-27Initial import of deliver-2.1.14, provided by Jim Bernard in pkg/9317.wiz1-0/+10
Extract from DESCR: Deliver allows any user to write a shell script that processes all incoming mail messages for that user. The system administrator may also install scripts that process all messages. The output of a script is a list of mail addresses, files and programs that should receive the message. It has access to each message as it is processed, so the action can be content dependent. The script may also generate automatic replies, like the "vacation" program, or pass along a modified version of the original message.