don't remove a.out explicitly. a.out should only be generated for
libraries and is removed in the non-default rule in bsd.lib.mk.
Removed undocumented cleanfiles target. It was the same as the
default clean target except it didn't descend into subdirs. It was
different from special clean targets in other ways. This feature
hasn't been missed for more important targets.
Removed unused default cleandepend target. bsd.dep.mk has a better
version which is always used.
Use a better rule for checkdpadd in the BINFORMAT=aout case. This
mainly checks that ld -f is working correctly. The old rule is
still available via `make BINFORMAT=foo checkdpadd' and should be
used to check for regressions under 2.2 where ld -f is not available.
(as in bsd.prog.mk). Include it if `checkdpadd' is being made, so that
it can be checked until it goes away.
Don't clean files that we don't create.
Fixed style of empty test.
when there is no /usr/src/share/info if it were actually used.
Added comments to explain duplicated tex commands.
Use substitution in IFILENS to simplify some things.
Removed /g from many substitutions. It is bogus for anchored matches.
Don't echo nothing.
Don't add things that wouldn't be built with the current options to
CLEANFILES (except for some cases involving tex).
Reviewed by: wosch
uk.phone (in line with na.phone). This is a more detailed
list than the one in inter.phone.
Add uk.postcodes. I've prefixed it with `uk' to leave room
for (maybe) au.postcodes etc. (if someone feels so inclined).
Obtained from: http://www.brainstorm.co.uk/public/utils
Ok'd to use by: steve@brainstorm.co.uk (Steve Crook)
information-hiding. Also recommended against naming typedefs to end
in _t unless POSIX or ANSI requires it, and in favor of using queue(3)
macros to generate lists rather than rolling one's own.
Some firmware versions becomes unreliable when these bits are not preserved,
e.g. ST15150N-0017 breaks if the DISC bit is cleared in the caching page.
This happened by default when editing the page.
we won't have double-slashes.
Add support for new port variable MANUAL_PACKAGE_BUILD. If this is
defined as well as the user variable PACKAGE_BUILDING, the port will
be ignored. This is used to mark ports that can be built normally
except on a machine that has a lot of conflicting ports (i.e., our
package building machine).