All Makefiles now use MACHINE_ARCH for the target architecture.
Unification is required for cross-building.
Tags added to:
sys/boot/Makefile
sys/boot/arc/loader/Makefile
sys/kern/Makefile
usr.bin/cpp/Makefile
usr.bin/gcore/Makefile
usr.bin/truss/Makefile
usr.bin/gcore/Makefile:
fixed typo: MACHINDE -> MACHINE_ARCH
Been in production for 3 years now. Gives Instant Frame relay to if_sr
and if_ar drivers, and PPPOE support soon. See:
ftp://ftp.whistle.com/pub/archie/netgraph/index.html
for on-line manual pages.
Reviewed by: Doug Rabson (dfr@freebsd.org)
Obtained from: Whistle CVS tree
2) s/MODLOAD/KMODLOAD/ to be consistent with the rest of the variables
(KMOD, KMODOWN, KMODGRP, etc) and definition of MODLOAD/UNLOAD in the
Makefile of the ATAPI module
3) textual fixups
Specifically intended for removing -fschg ("INSTALLFLAGS_EDIT=:S/schg/uchg/")
this makes the NOFSCHG flag redundant. NOFSCHG will still be honoured by
bsd.lib.mk but is valid for buildworld only. NOFSCHG is still implemented in
the old way (ie. _not_ ".if NOFSCHG then { INSTALLFLAGS_EDIT+=:S/schg/,/ }"
to emphasize the fact that NOFSCHG is only supported in a limited
fashion and for buildworld.
The interface and implementation are such that future use of flags such
as sappnd can also be easily removed or altered (perhaps to uappnd).
This commit brought to you by the letters B, D, and E, and the numbers six,
one, thirteen, and three.
-DNOFSCHG disables installation of libs with flag schg
GAMEGRP change the group with which games are installed
also organize the binary section into alphebetical order some what..
/usr/sbin/sysctl -> ${DESTDIR}/sbin/sysctl in some versions of 2.2,
and this link was broken if DESTDIR was set.
Added a SYMLINKS macro. This works the same as LINKS, except it
creates symlinks and the linked-to pathname may be relative. This
is more flexible than LN_FLAGS, since it supports installing
symlinks independently of hard links.
Use `ln -f[s] ...' instead of `rm -f ...; ln [-s] ...' for LINKS and
SYMLINKS. This is equivalent if the target is neither a directory nor
a symlink to a directory.
PR: 8279
is not implied by -Wall as claimed by gcc.1. Adding it causes a
measly 7193 new warnings for LINT, mostly for "unused parameter" and
"comparison between signed and unsigned".
There are only skeletons left here; they merely serve as a backup to
include the real versions under ${PORTSDIR}/Mk while we update the ports
tree to include them directly.
<bsd.libnames.mk> is included regardless of the object file format.
This is needed to fix the a.out PAM breakage that manifests itself
when trying to build login.
When linking statically, LIBPAM is augmented with the extra libraries
that the PAM modules require. The idea is to centralize this
information rather than scattering it about in the Makefiles of
all the applications that use (OK, will use) PAM.
There is a new variable MINUSLPAM that should be used instead of
"-lpam". In the static case, it gets -l flags for the extra required
libraries.
This approach was suggested by <bde>, but he didn't actually review
my changes.
building dlopen-able modules, and add features needed to build a
static PAM library. I think I cleaned it up some, too, but beauty
is in the eye of the beholder.
You can now build a shared library without version numbers, by
defining SHLIB_NAME to something like "pam_unix.so". If SHLIB_MAJOR
and/or SHLIB_MINOR are set, SHLIB_NAME gets the usual default value,
but it can be overridden if desired. If none of these symbols are
set, no shared library is built.
SHLIB_LINK controls the name of the symbolic link that points to
the library. If it is unset, no link is made. In the usual case,
it gets the right default: e.g., "libc.so" for ELF, nothing for
a.out. This can be overridden.
STATICOBJS can be set to a list of extra object files that should
be added to the static library but not to the shared library.
These objects are added to the profiled library too.
These changes should make it easy to use <bsd.lib.mk> for building
things such as PAM modules and dynamic linkers, for which <bsd.prog.mk>
has been abused until now.
(as given by "uname -m") by which you can specify which
architectures the port is appropriate for.
Idea borrowed from: NetBSD, OpenBSD
Reviewed by: simokawa
(2) New variable PERL_ARCH (value: ${ARCH}-freebsd) that is also
passed to ${PLIST_SUB}. Use it to simplify PLISTs.
Submitted by: simokawa
(3) Check OSVERSION as well as existence of /usr/bin/perl5 before
assuming USE_PERL5 is to be a no-op. Basically to allow building
of 2.2-INDEX on a 3.0 machine.
(4) Change USE_QT definition to use new shlib version (2) and
directory (qt142).
(5) Uncomment temporary Motif dependency for parallel package
building. We still need to figure out a way to install the pkg
database files, but it's a start.
(6) Move EXTRACT_SUFX up into the pre.mk area so it can be used in
exists() tests.
(7) Add MASTER_SITE_COMP_SOURCES. Note that this is defined like
"/pub/usenet/comp.sources.%SUBDIR%/" so you can specify something
like "SUBDIR=x/volume18" to select the newsgroup as well as
subdirectory name.
Submitted by: "distfiles" fenner
(8) Other misc. master site cleanup.
Submitted by: "distfiles" fenner
(9) New target "maintainer". I intend to use it to auto-mail failure
build failure notices to the maintainer.
than ".so". The old extension conflicted with well-established
naming conventions for dynamically loadable modules.
The "clean" targets continue to remove ".so" files too, to deal with
old systems.
don't recurse in "make describe". The new INDEX target in
ports/Makefile invokes a perl script to recurse and convert them
into package names.
While I'm here, change the name of targets and move them around a
little bit for the sake of consistency.
It is also probably worth noting here that the meaning of the
"build dependency" list in INDEX has been changed slightly
changed. The old list was "build depends and its build depends"
-- not particularly useful if you had things like autoconf, which
run-depend on gm4 (you install all the things listed here and
you'll get an autoconf that won't run).
It is now "build depends and its run depends" -- you install
everything listed here, and you'll be able to build the port.
Submitted by: steve
(0') Fast README.html generation. It uses ports/INDEX to find
dependencies instead of embarking on to a recursive loop.
Submitted by: steve
(1) Remove NO_WRKDIR and NO_EXTRACT. Their functionality are easily
replacable with NO_WRKSUBDIR=t and EXTRACT_ONLY= (nothing on right
side), and they get in the way of read-only port trees.
(2) Surround first few variable definitions with ".if !defined()".
This will make cross-compilation easier and also speed up make
processes.
(3) Call sysctl with absolute path. Prefer the one in /sbin over the
one in /usr/sbin.
(4) Add four new variables
PKGINSTALL?= ${PKGDIR}/INSTALL
PKGDEINSTALL?= ${PKGDIR}/DEINSTALL
PKGREQ?= ${PKGDIR}/REQ
PKGMESSAGE?= ${PKGDIR}/MESSAGE
and use them in PKG_ARGS. Frobbing with PKG_ARGS directly is
strongly discouraged.
(5) Change PKG_SUFX to ".tar" (instead of ".tgz") if PKG_NOCOMPRESS is
defined. This is intended only for our own use.
(6) Add more sites to MASTER_SITE_GNU.
Submitted by: billf
(7) Override MANUAL_PACKAGE_BUILD if PARALLEL_PACKAGE_BUILD is
defined. This is intended only for our own use.
(8) Add new target "ignorelist" which will print out the package name
if the port is not going to be built on this machine. This is
intended only for our own use.
(9) Make mtree a little quieter.
break one way or another. With it goes the package-loop and the
describe loop.
(2) Add new variable MASTERDIR to make it easier to share files between ports.
bsd.port.mk will find things like ${PKGDIR} underneath
${MASTERDIR} (which defaults to ${.CURDIR}).
(3) Do not allow MD5_FILE to be renamed. Funny things can happen if
you do that.
(4) Use a few more absolute paths in the bsd.port.pre.mk part. I
can't use absolute paths for sysctl because it moved recently.