prefix later, but doing so with @cwd %%OLDPREFIX%% (having
PLIST_SUB+="OLDPREFIX=${PREFIX}") hardcodes the value in the packing
list. That's not really a problem when dealing with ports but that's
a problem with packages since pkg_add -p option only overrides the
first @cwd occurrence.
This patch allow us to use @cwd without any argument. If no
directory argument is given, it will set current working directory
to the first prefix given by the @cwd command.
PR: bin/77212
Submitted by: flz
function as @comment has. But will be valid only for files and not
for md5 sums, rcsid's and comments in the future.
Submitted by: flz
Approved by: re@ (scottl)
register a list of other packages with which they conflict (via the
-C option to pkg_create), and they will refuse to install (unless -f is
specified) if one of the listed packages is already present.
* Update documentation for the new feature as well as fleshing out some
existing documentation.
* Bump PKG_INSTALL_VERSION so this feature can be tested for.
Submitted by: Sergey Matveychuk <sem@ciam.ru>
PR: bin/47145
MFC after: 2 weeks
using new `@comment DEPORIGIN:...' directive. This would allow us to make
many neat things including:
- easier binary upgrades;
- source upgrades without using external tools by simply extending
bsd.port.mk and pkg_install tools;
- mixed-mode upgrades (source + binary);
- depreciate and deorbit silly +REQUIRED_BY files in the near future.
This feature is no-op until appropriate bsd.port.mk patch is committed, and
even when it is already committed packages generated will remain 100%
compatible with old set of pkg_install tools (module all those neat
features, of course).
MFC after: 6 days
non-backward compatible changes in the format of packing list and handle
them gracefully;
- fix a longstanding issue with symlinks handling. Instead of recording
checksum for the file symlink points to, record checksum for the value
returned by readlink(2). For backward compatibility increase packing list
format minor version number and provide a fallback to a previous behaviour,
if package in question was created with older version of pkg_* tools;
Submitted by: Alec Wolman <wolman@cs.washington.edu>, sobomax
- don't record MD5 checksum for device nodes, fifo's and other non-regular
files.
Submitted by: nbm
MFC in: 2 weeks
- fix a harmless bug in match_installed() function introduced in my last
commit;
- uniformely reorder includes across files.
Submitted by: Garrett Rooney <rooneg@electricjellyfish.net>
Not objected by: jkh, -ports
checksums (to see if it's been modified post-installation). Naturally,
this mechanism is only as secure as the contents of /var/db/pkg if you're
using it for auditing purposes.
Submitted by: Roman Shterenzon <roman@xpert.com>
a path of the port from which package has been created within FreeBSD Ports
Collection and will be used to improve pkg_version(1) and similar tools.
Reviewed by: ports@FreeBSD.org, jkh
Approved by: jkh
concerning where they're taking place.
Switch from [r]index() to str[r]chr() functions, which are more ISO
compliant.
Prompted by: Edward Welbourne <eddy@vortigen.demon.co.uk>
This will make a number of things easier in the future, as well as (finally!)
avoiding the Id-smashing problem which has plagued developers for so long.
Boy, I'm glad we're not using sup anymore. This update would have been
insane otherwise.
pkg_manage silently dumps core, pkg_info claims about them to
stderr, which makes very difficult to find what directory cause it via
tons of pkg_info -a output. I found solution which covers both variants,
now pkg_info claims about missing files to stdout among valid output
with ERROR: prefix. It heals pkg_manage to not dump core and makes
easy to find errors in pkg_info -a output by simple /ERROR 'more' command.
Index descriptions are limited to MAXINDEXSIZE (60) chars. Any description
beyond that is truncated. Also, only the first line is displayed as well.
This allows pkg_info -a -I to be formated in two columns with one line
per package for easy reading.
Reviewed by: jkh
-q turns on "quiet" mode, where informational headers and such are not
dumped, just the information.
-L Shows full pathnames of files comprising a package. With -q,
this can be useful for doing fileset operations, such as
"du -s `pkg_info -q -L foo_bin`" to see how much space package
"foo_bin" is taking up.