the right solution or not, bsd.port.mk is broken unless bsd.locale.mk
is installed.
Note that if LOCALE is not defined, port-building explodes:
"/usr/share/mk/bsd.locale.mk", line 135: if-less elif
"/usr/share/mk/bsd.locale.mk", line 135: Need an operator
(For each .if testing LOCALE)
Notes:
- We no longer use -fgnu-runtime in bsd.lib.mk, since it is the default
and bsd.lib.mk is the wrong place to override it.
- Gnu C doesn't have a special compiler driver for Objective C like it
does for C++. The defaults are suitable for Gnu C. Use `OBJCLIBS='
in /etc/make.conf for POC.
is used in the dependency list for ${DEPENDFILE}. `make depend' was
broken for a few days. `make world' only uses `make depend' when
NOCLEAN is defined, so only a few people noticed the bug.
Submitted by: mostly by jmg
bsd.obj.mk instead of bsd.dep.mk for defining the _SUBDIR target
and a default tags target. Abuse bsd.obj.mk for defining default
cleandepend and depend targets.
that want a y.tab.h file. This want must be specified by putting y.tab.h
in SRCS (and defaulting to or putting -d in YFLAGS). This only works if
there is only one yacc parser, of course. One improvement: copy y.tab.c
to foo.c instead of renaming it, so that `#line...y.tab.c' statements in
it refer to an existing file.
Regress to not generating explicit rules for .l and .y sources containing
slashes. This case is unusual and hard to handle properly.
Don't generate an unused dependency when -d is not in YFLAGS.
sources. This will be used to fix `make -jN' races in many
Makefiles in /usr/src, and to simplify these and other Makefiles.
To get the fixes and simplifications, application Makefiles should
put the raw lex and yacc source names (foo.l and bar.y) in SRCS and
not put the names of any generated files in SRCS or CLEANFILES. A
few Makefiles already do this, although it didn't actually work before
(mkdep couldn't create complete dependencies because there is no
intermediate .c file for the .y.o and .l.o implicit rules).
Complications: if bar.y is in SRCS and -d is in YFLAGS, then bar.h
will be generated whether or not it is used, even if this clobbers a
real source file. This is so that bar.c can be generated using the
-j-safe and debugger-friendly -o option to YACC. There are smaller
warts for handling y.tab.h. y.tab.c and lex.yy.c are not supported.
`BINFORMAT=foo make checkdpadd' in /usr/src now reports only 2 false
negatives (in libss and init). (BINFORMAT=foo is to turn off better
handling of the a.out case.)
- the two `_EXTRADEPEND::' targets potentially clobbered each other for
`make -jN'. In practice, the output for the second target sometimes
disappeared.
- bogus dependencies were generated for static libraries.
headers in ${SRCS}, as in bsd.lmod.mk and bsd.prog.mk. This helps
`make [-j]' work when .depend doesn't exist. Even plain `make'
sometimes only worked because of magic ordering in ${SRCS}.
use the default without losing any (currently unused) features.
(CLEANDIRS is only used by for libgmp and libmp via bsd.lib.mk, and
only documented everywhere it is supported except of course where it
is actually used.)
I don't know what the hell I was thinking in: rev. 1.268
(2) Create ${PREFIX} before calling mtree if it doesn't exist. This
may not be the best solution, but pre-install is called after
mtree so there really isn't any way to fix this from the port
Makefiles and thus has to be done here.
Reviewed by: the lists
(2) Change MASTER_SITE_CTAN to reflect current reality.
Submitted by: fenner
(3) Add new port variable NO_LATEST_LINK. When this is set, the
"Latest" package symlink is not created. Use this for ports that
are betas when there is also a port for an older, more stable,
version.
(4) Don't be too stupid about "make deinstall".
Submitted by: fenner
in kernel Makefiles. Nothing in /usr/include is used (provided
relative paths for sys/* and <machine> can be found), so there is
no need for the -I/usr/include kludge as in kernel Makefiles.
them in the include path. This fixes recent breakage of the syscons
LKMs and general brokenness of the include paths (headers under
/usr/include were used in many cases).