Previously, we were using ruby->=1.8,<=1.9, instead of
ruby->=1.8,<1.9. While this wouldn't cause an issue, since
our ruby-1.9.2 package isn't included in ruby->=1.8,<=1.9,
it's still wrong and should be fixed. This also fixes the
following minor issues:
Switch from using FLAVOR to MODRUBY_FLAVOR for *_DEPENDS.
Currently we don't have a ruby port that uses FLAVORs that
would differ from MODRUBY_FLAVOR, but it's possible we will
in the future.
Switch from BASE_PKGPATH to BUILD_PKGPATH in a few cases in
REGRESS_DEPENDS. This probably is not strictly necessary, but
BUILD_PKGPATH is used in more cases, so it is good for
consistency.
Switch to new style *_DEPENDS, with the version specification
at the end. The remaining cases where this is not done is
because a specific version is used.
Some FULLPKGNAME added to REGRESS_DEPENDS, to make sure that if
the old version is installed when you run a regress test, it
will install the new version first.
Some conversion of spaces to tabs for consistency.
OK landry@
PKG_ARCH = * removed from many ports as it is added automatically
for pure ruby gem ports. Switch ports that previously used
GEM_SKIPDEPENDS to adding dependencies or modifying the underlying
gem metadata with patches.
OK landry@
Gemcutter was replaced with rubygems.org, so remove the MASTER_SITES
from the Makefiles and let MASTER_SITE_RUBYGEMS in ruby.port.mk
handles things.
OK sthen@ "if the checksums still match"
In the upgrade from ruby 1.8.6 to 1.8.7, the PLISTs changed
due to differences in how RDoc processes files.
This also has a number of changes to the regress tests to
work with the changes to devel/ruby-rake. It moves most of
the regress tests to use MODRUBY_REGRESS.
OK jcs@, landry@, jasper@, sthen@
The goal of Couch Potato is to create a minimal framework in order
to store and retrieve Ruby objects to/from CouchDB and create
and query views.
It follows the document/view/querying semantics established by
CouchDB and won't try to mimic ActiveRecord behavior in any way
as that IS BAD.
Lastly Couch Potato aims to provide a seamless integration
with Ruby on Rails, e.g. routing, form helpers etc.