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automatically detects whether we want the pkginstall machinery to be
used by the package Makefile.
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as the INSTALL and DEINSTALL scripts no longer distinguish between
the two types of files. Drop SUPPORT_FILES{,_PERMS} and modify the
packages in pkgsrc accordingly.
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and ${CFLAGS}. This fixes the build of net/djbdns, as well as any
other of these packages passing down PKG_SYSCONFDIR via CFLAGS, as
well as being more generally correct for arbitrary user-defined
CFLAGS. Suggested by jlam.
For consistency across djbware in pkgsrc:
* In math/djbfft's and sysutils/daemontools's do-configure targets,
remove leading @ from ${ECHO} lines; from the former, also remove
unneeded single quotes from one such line.
* Rename net/publicfile's pre-build and sysutils/service-config's
post-patch targets to do-configure.
* In sysutils/checkpassword's do-configure target, reorder creation
of conf-cc, conf-ld, and conf-home.
All of the affected packages have been verified to compile.
XXX These packages probably have enough build goo in common to
XXX warrant an mk/djbware.mk. I'll investigate this post-freeze.
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Suggested by Roland Illig, ok'd by various.
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for qmail).
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mess822 is a library for parsing Internet mail messages. The mess822
package contains several applications that work with qmail:
* ofmipd rewrites messages from dumb clients. It supports a database
of recognized senders and From lines, using cdb for fast lookups.
* new-inject is an experimental new version of qmail-inject. It
includes a flexible user-controlled hostname rewriting mechanism.
* iftocc can be used in .qmail files. It checks whether a known
address is listed in To or Cc.
* 822header, 822field, 822date, and 822received extract various
pieces of information from a mail message.
* 822print converts a message into an easier-to-read format.
mess822 supports the full complexity of RFC 822 address lists,
including address groups, source routes, spaces around dots, etc.
It also supports common RFC 822 extensions: backslashes in atoms,
dots in phrases, addresses without host names, etc. It extracts
each address as an easy-to-use string, with a separate string for
the accompanying comment.
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