freebsd-skq/contrib/serf
peter 6c648dd642 Introduce svnlite so that we can check out our source code again.
This is actually a fully functional build except:
* All internal shared libraries are static linked to make sure there
  is no interference with ports (and to reduce build time).
* It does not have the python/perl/etc plugin or API support.
* By default, it installs as "svnlite" rather than "svn".
* If WITH_SVN added in make.conf, you get "svn".
* If WITHOUT_SVNLITE is in make.conf, this is completely disabled.

To be absolutely clear, this is not intended for any use other than
checking out freebsd source and committing, like we once did with cvs.

It should be usable for small scale local repositories that don't
need the python/perl plugin architecture.
2013-06-18 02:53:45 +00:00
..
auth
buckets
build
buildconf
CHANGES
config.layout
configure
configure.in
context.c
design-guide.txt
incoming.c
LICENSE
Makefile.in
NOTICE
outgoing.c
README
serf_bucket_types.h
serf_bucket_util.h
serf_private.h
serf.h
serf.mak
serf.pc.in
serfmake
ssltunnel.c

Welcome to serf, a high-performance asynchronous HTTP client library.

The serf library is a C-based HTTP client library built upon the Apache
Portable Runtime (APR) library. It multiplexes connections, running the
read/write communication asynchronously. Memory copies and transformations are
kept to a minimum to provide high performance operation.

  * Status: http://code.google.com/p/serf/wiki/
  * Site: http://code.google.com/p/serf/
  * Code: http://serf.googlecode.com/svn/
  * Issues: http://code.google.com/p/serf/issues/list
  * Mail: serf-dev@googlegroups.com
  * People: Justin Erenkrantz, Greg Stein 

----

Quick guide for the impatient

  (Unix)
  % ./configure
  % make
  % make install

----

Building serf from a Subversion checkout (non-packaged releases)

We suggest that you try out 'serfmake'.

 % ./serfmake --prefix=/usr/local/serf --with-apr=/usr/local/apr install

If you want to use the autoconf build system and are using a Subversion
checkout, you need to run buildconf and have APR and APR-util sources handy.

 % ./buildconf --with-apr=/path/to/apr --with-apr-util=/path/to/apr-util
 (By default, buildconf will look in . and ../ for apr and apr-util.)

Then, you can use ./configure, make, etc.