Commit Graph

7 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
espie
917e42e18b update to 3.3.10 (recommended update), speeds up some operations, fixes
some fringe cases, and passes all its regression tests now.

okay robert@
2007-01-16 23:24:32 +00:00
espie
a82bd3404c new MULTI_PACKAGES 2006-11-24 22:53:03 +00:00
jolan
ba7ee47af0 update to 3.3.4 2006-03-22 01:36:11 +00:00
sturm
e0d4ddb902 SHARED_LIBS, USE_LIBTOOl 2005-12-26 21:32:00 +00:00
espie
0031945c6e Fix a buglet in bsd.port.mk where the PSEUDO_FLAVORS get encoded into
the FULLPKGPATH, thus providing changes to packing-lists which shouldn't
happen, and making update more difficult.

Accordingly, bump all pkgnames with PSEUDO_FLAVORS, and provide an
update @pkgpath for the bug for most of them (left out the ones with 3
or 4 pseudo flavors for space constraints...)
2005-09-16 09:51:25 +00:00
jolan
6cf0b94f72 - update to 3.2.1 + patch for invalid array access (sent & accepted
upstream)
- subpackage tcl stuff & add no_tcl pseudo flavor

ok djm@
2005-04-28 22:58:28 +00:00
djm
ed904462a9 Import of sqlite3, a public-domain in-process SQL engine:
SQLite is a C library that implements an embeddable SQL database engine.
    Programs that link with the SQLite library can have SQL database access
    without running a separate RDBMS process. The distribution comes with a
    standalone command-line access program (sqlite) that can be used to
    administer an SQLite database and which serves as an example of how to
    use the SQLite library. SQLite is not a client library used to connect to
    a big database server. SQLite is the server. The SQLite library reads and
    writes directly to and from the database files on disk.

Note that sqlite3 is not backwards compatible with sqlite2, but they can be 
installed in parallel (thus the separate port). ok jolan@
2004-11-07 00:10:17 +00:00