options `start' and `stop' now (unless I have forgotten any). This allows
us to call the scripts from /etc/rc.shutdown with the correct option.
The (42 or so) ports that already DTRT before are unchanged.
Add some missing/wrong dependencies. Show how to respect CC/CFLAGS. Many
miscellaneous modifications. I used more excessive hacks to force p5-Jcode
and p5-WWW-Search to respect CC/CFLAGS.
Patches largely done by: Christian Weisgerber <naddy@mips.inka.de>
previous commit message to bsd.port.mk, which said INSTALL_SHLIBS. Boo.)
Line up the rhs of variable assignments nicely. Remove a couple of extra
whitespaces while I'm here.
Suggested by: sobomax
It allows you to set the address of a domain in the SOA record.
It will adds a "IN A <address>" line to the SOA.
This is needed for sites that want a default address for a partial name -
say just yahoo.com instead of forcing users to always type www.yahoo.com.
Submitted by: "David Peterson" <chief@mail.idrive.com>
nslookups in a non-blocking manner. The adns distribution also comes with
some utilities similar to dig, host, nslookup, etc.
The port that I'm importing rips out the ${PORTOBJFORMAT} checking and
also trims the extra stuff in pkg/DESCR, which the original submission
contained.
PR: 17510
Submitted by: Kostya Lukin <lukin@sapa.ivcme.elektra.ru>
Reviewed by: billf, mharo
domain is configured and functioning correctly. It makes no
attempt to validate the data inside a domain, only the structure.
PR: 15256
Submitted by: MIHIRA Yoshiro <sanpei@sanpei.org>
* Bug fix: grep -v changed to grep -iv (compare domains caselessly).
* Bug fix: nameservers now sorted in SOA serial number order, largest first.
This way you can dlint the primary server immediately after making changes
to it (previously had to wait for secondaries to do their update).
* Optimization: if any nameserver does not return an SOA record in Test 1,
it is removed from the list of nameservers and a warning is reported.
This way dlint won't use broken nameservers during the rest of the run.
* Sanity check domain names of nameservers themselves: any nameserver with
in-addr.arpa. in its name generates a warning and is skipped.