this is to force pkg_add -u to pick them up because moving to PIE does change
these files but since there are no library bumps, the package signature stays
the same.
there are probably others, these are just ones I've run into. not a great
fix, and needs to be repeated when other arch move, but it's the simplest low
impact fix and I'm fed up with "relocation R_X86_64_32S can not be used
when making a shared object; recompile with -fPIC"
(it wants Data.Serialize.IEEE754).
Bump the other ports where necessary (because their haskell package
signatures changed).
Suggestion about bumps, and ok kili@
TCLAP is a small, flexible library that provides a simple interface
for defining and accessing command line arguments. It was initially
inspired by the user friendly CLAP libary. The difference is that
this library is templatized, so the argument class is type independent.
Type independence avoids identical-except-for-type objects, such
as IntArg, FloatArg, and StringArg. While the library is not strictly
compliant with the GNU or POSIX standards, it is close.
TCLAP is written in ANSI C++ and is meant to be compatible with any
standards-compliant C++ compiler. It is known to work on Linux,
MacOS X, Windows, and Solaris platforms. The library is implemented
entirely in header files making it easy to use and distribute with
other software. It is licensed under the MIT License for worry free
distribution.
Switch.pm provides the syntax and semantics for an explicit case
mechanism for Perl. The syntax is minimal, introducing only the
keywords "switch" and "case" and conforming to the general pattern
of existing Perl control structures. The semantics are particularly
rich, allowing any one (or more) of nearly 30 forms of matching to
be used when comparing a switch value with its various cases.
This is from CPAN and works the same as a deprecated function in
Perl base which will be removed in a future version.
is now distributed as a gem, so deal with that. Remove patch
that is no longer needed. This release works with ruby 1.9, and
will build a ruby 1.9 package by default.
OK landry@
Quilt allows you to easily manage large numbers of patches by keeping
track of the changes each patch makes. Patches can be applied,
un-applied, refreshed, and more.
whith help from sthen and aja, ok aja
* Memory usage optimized for comparison of large directories.
* In overview for two way diff show if only one side contains text.
* If text is selected in either input or output window use that in
Find dialog.
* Command line option --cs doesn't change the config value permanently
anymore.
Also remove unneeded flags from CXXFLAGS, sync WANTLIB, and update my
email address.
Thank you to brad@, espie@, and pascal@ for guidance on fixing
CXXFLAGS, and Amit Kulkarni for testing.
Tested on amd64 and i386.
OK brad@ sthen@
Python module that implements ISO 8601 date, time and duration parsing.
The implementation follows ISO8601:2004 standard, and implements only
date/time representations mentioned in the standard. If something is not
mentioned there, then it is treated as non existent, and not as an
allowed option.
ok aja@
The Simple Protocol for Independent Computing Environments (SPICE) is a
remote display system built for virtual environments which allows you to
view a computing 'desktop' environment not only on the machine where it
is running, but from anywhere on the Internet and from a wide variety of
machine architectures.
This package provides headers defining protocols.
ok aja@ gsoares@
ports, for the ports that are built both on ruby 1.8 and ruby 1.9,
switch the category Makefiles to explicitly list the ruby18 FLAVOR
instead of the ruby19 FLAVOR.
Also, for home_run, fastri, and fastercsv, explicitly build only the
ruby 1.8 version of the port. These libraries can run on ruby 1.9, but
it doesn't make sense to build a ruby 1.9 version by default.
by default, since the ruby 1.8 version now has a ruby18 explicit FLAVOR.
Remove dependency on parsetree, since it isn't a required dependency,
and parsetree does not run on ruby 1.9.
- remove useless patch to gfx/thebes/Makefile.in adding -lpangox-1.0 to
EXTRA_DSO_LDOPTS, this was maybe useful before ffx 3.0, but mozilla
stopped using pangox between 2.0 and 3.0. See for the last traces of
pangox.h use : https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=528941. See
also bugs #323671/#338446
- backport the patch from #528941 to remove useless pangox.h inclusion
from www/firefox35.
- remove the RUN_DEPENDS on pangox-compat
- bump all corresponding REVISIONS
- while here, make sure all moz ports depend on latest nspr 4.9.2 since
it'll be a requirement for upcoming gecko 16 releases
The situation is this: even when we --disable-gtk-doc, if gtk-doc is
actually installed at configure stage, tools like gtkdoc-rebase will be
picked up and run during the install target. That is bad because the
gtk-doc package may have been removed by then, especially during dpb(1)
bulks (we explicitely disable support for it so why should it stay...).
So for now, let's add the following env to configure whenever we use
--disable-gtk-doc, until a bettersolution is found...
CONFIGURE_ENV +=ac_cv_path_GTKDOC_CHECK="" \
ac_cv_path_GTKDOC_REBASE="" \
ac_cv_path_GTKDOC_MKPDF=""
available development release (glib2-2.33.14). A new stable is supposed
to come out within the next 2 weeks and we want to be proactive and get
some things in tree before the big GNOME 3.6 update that we will work on
at p2k12.
big thank to jasper@ for running this and the upcoming updates in a bulk
ok jasper@
- Garbage collect patch adding -pthread hack while here.
- Improve pthread_set_name_np() call (returns void)
- Needed anyway by upcoming Mozilla 16 releases
been in a bunch of amd64 bulks, ok ajacoutot@
Also add @comment'ed lines for lib/charset.alias and share/locale/locale.alias,
no problem at present but will save hassle if someone blindly update-plist's
later.