tool has something in common with update-patches shell script, but has more
features and is more intelligent. See README.patchtool or source code for
details.
categories which were failing to be mapped from directory to port name
because 'make index' can't know to run 'make describe' in directories
it doesn't know exist.
(2) (portbuild) Change no-output timeout from 1800 to 3600. Some ports
seem to actually take more than 30 minutes inside a command.
(3) (portbuild) Add -p flag to tar when extracting bindist.
(4) (makeindex) Remove the -j flag to make index, the argument was 1 anyway.
(1) The script now assumes make(1) knows how to handle long dependency
chains properly. quickports is a list of ports that take a
long time to build by thesmelves (not ports that have long
dependency chains). The script adds several extra dependency
levels to the generate Makefile for those ports to make their
dependency chains longer.
(2) Use -R flag to cvs. Comment out the cvsup part.
(3) Preserve error messages for ports that didn't build the first
time around but did build on the retry.
(4) Record the package's timestamps in the log directory by doing
an "ls -asFlrt" in the packages/All directory.
(5) Add a little sleep after two background jobs so outputs won't
be garbled.
guess WRKSRC or PATCHDIR. Don't munge "." characters in filenames.
This requires support in bsd.port.mk, a patch for which is in PR
24292.
Submitted by: Christian Weisgerber <naddy@mips.inka.de>
which holds final veto power over what @dirrm lines go into the plist.
This is a bit less evil than all the regexps previously used to manually
remove those directories.
mkpbuild just builds a port with WRKDIRPREFIX and PREFIX set to a
directory in /tmp, and with the owner and group variables set to the
user. A placeholder - in future, it'll have build error/log parsing.
mkpinstall's claim to fame is to do the same, except with "make install"
instead of "make build", and it then parses the mtree file, and compares
that and the current directory tree and the files, and auto-generates a
plist.
They're not pretty, but they finish the mkptools set basic
functionality: automatic skeleton generation with mkpskel, on-extraction
requirements guessing, and plist generation.
Future direction might be parsing build and install failures, checking
for '/usr/local' abuse, more requirements guessing, and stuff like that.
to the extra testing's make procs. Fix _stupid_ mistake where -n option
had no effect on hindering ``cvs add'' and CVSROOT/modules updating.
Cosmetics; remove extra space in generated commit log message and fix the
usage section's style in regards to options that take arguments. Add
missing -g option's mention.
Submitted by: assar (DISTDIR, CVSROOT/modules updating routine bugs)
than CVSROOT (now ADDPCVSROOT) to avoid conflicts for people who normally
set CVSROOT to something besides freefall (like myself). Second, allow
autofill to work for non-PR additions by checking for a -l argument of -1.
Third, remove the bogus $portname check in autofill that screws up if you
are adding something with a PKGNAMEPREFIX (i.e. p5-).
let portlint fill out your commit log message. It takes data from your
port's Makefile and pkg-comment to generate this, then displays the
resulting file and gives a chance to fix any problems.
Also, change -c option to move the file to the temp directory. Since -c
and -l option conflict, -l will take precedence. Move -c option down to
where directories are parsed.
Reviewed by: Jeremy Shaffner <jeremy@external.org>
new port. Slight hack used to obtain absolute path for the file. I'll
probably change that to make it copy the file to the tmpdir instead. For
now, this provides a stepping stone to use to begin automating commit log
messages - with, of course, a chance to edit the file again.
is going to commit a large number of ports and doesn't want to bloat
the repo any more than necessary. Later on I'll add support to
modulesupdate to do multiple modules at the same time. I should check that
script in CVS, but nobody's repocopied non-ports-specific tools to src yet
to my knowledge so I can't do that.
cvs ops. Many committers found it difficult to debug while using addport
with the -n argument. I'm inclined to agree with the sentiment.
Submitted by: sada, deischen, others
ftp site (specified in portbuild.conf). (It used to be implied by
-norestr.)
(2) Remove x11-toolkits/Motif-dummy from list of dummy ports, since
open-motif is now the default. Also gone is the MOTIF_OPEN
variable.
(3) Run the tar -czf of the ports tree and generation of CHECKSUM.MD5
in the background.
(4) Print the amount of time it took for the entire process, as well
as phase 1 and phase 2 of the compilations. (It is done by date
-r, so it will only work modulo 24 hours. Hopefully the build
will never go over 24 hours again.)
(5) Make symlink of the form [ae].${branch}.YYYYMMDD ->
[ae].${branch}.YYYYMMDDHH so we can have the simple "date" form as
well as the new "date+hour" directories for logs.
(6) Remove temporary make status files from /tmp that are over 60
minutes since the last modification. It was filling up the root
filesystem.
(7) Print out an "ls -lrt" of packages/All into logs/ls-lrt. This is
going to be used to evaluate make's job dispatch policies.
1) Re-add functionality removed in revision 1.11, but only as an option.
This time, it checks out its own copy of ports/Mk and points PORTSDIR
at the correct location. To use this, use the -a option. It will not
work if it can't find portlint in your path.
2) Add option -f to disable fetching the distfile.
3) Add option -m to disable checking out a copy of Mk for 1). For those
that have a current Mk in PORTSDIR and don't want to check out a fresh
copy for whatever reason.
4) Support CVSROOT environment variable.
5) Note environment variables recognized by addport.
6) Fix breakage trying to use -d with multiple directories (not tested).
7) Actually use $interactive variable.
8) Update usage().
9) Note original RCSID for my shell script; take over as MAINTAINER.
Tested by: gshapiro (this revision was used in adding sendmail)
mkptools are broken up into simple scripts:
mkpskel takes a distribution file as an argument and generates a
skeleton; it guesses the extract method, the package name, and so forth,
and generates populated Makefile and distinfo and empty pkg-descr,
pkg-comment, and pkg-plist.
mkpextr goes through the extract phase, and generates what it believes
are the necessary variables necessary to build the port. It guesses the
work source directory, what the Makefile is called, whether it has
configure, whether to use libtool, and other bits such as wildly
guessing kde, qt, gtk, gnome, and ssl requirements. Run it in a port
directory, and it generates Makefile.extr.
mkpmerge merges the results from mkpskel and mkpextr (and will later
merge the results from the other phases) into Makefile.
mkpclean cleans up any extra files that may be hanging about.
automatic checking on their ports to be added, I'm removing it and its
overriding -v option. Let the improper port additions continue, and screw
anyone who doesn't care about the repo.
Propelled by: obrien, msmith
mtree outputs.
Also change the title of the file from "List of extra files and
directories" to "List of files and directories that do not match their
mtree description", which is more accurate.
/var/portbuild is the new designated home of the portbuild setup, and
is expected to be a symlink to wherever you choose to put the stuff.
Also, change reportload to use /var/portbuild to store temporary files.
Seems there are some bugs in the null mount code that make the files
inaccessible if you are using an NFS root.
around now.
Make a symlink "Makefile" so I don't have to "make -f ../../Makefile"
when I'm restarting an aborted build.
Print out pnohang messages along with ptimeout messages.
Count the number of jobs at the beginning of the second phase too.
Check integrity of packages at end with gzip -t. Remove the ones that
don't pass the test.
Don't try to compare list of packages if there is no prior list to
compare with.
If the -norestr flag is given, copy the packages to the ftp site.