Don't link unconditinally with $NCURSESLIB. When NCURSESLIB is /usr/lib and the system compiler is base GCC, GCC from ports (currently GCC9) is used. Passing -L/usr/lib makes GCC try to link to base libstdc++ instead the one from ports.
Also add USES=localbase:ldflags.
PR: 239481
Approved by: linimon (mentor), greg@unrelenting.technology (maintainer)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21397
In file included from metaLevelOpSymbol.cc💯
In file included from ./descentFunctions.cc:584:
In file included from ../../src/Mixfix/variableGenerator.hh:33:
/usr/local/include/cvc4/expr/expr_manager.h:47:10: fatal error: 'cvc4_public.h' file not found
#include "cvc4_public.h"
Reported by: pkg-fallout
- Add CVC4 support option and enabled by default
- Unbreak on aarch64, sbrk is not used anymore
- Remove build date to make the build reproducible
- Pass maintainership to submitter
- Pet `portlint -abct`
PR: 231443
Submitted by: Greg V <greg@unrelenting.technology>
- Set to link directly against ncurses (not curses)
- Explicitly set extra patches to apply to DF as well. They were already
but it wasn't clear if that was wanted or not.
- set USES=alias to fix building on DF
The MASTER_SITES was changed and so was the name of one distfile, the
contents remained the same.
PR: 210018
Submitted by: Keith Gaughan <k@stereochro.me>
MFH: 2016Q4
COMMENT typos and surrounding whitespace fixes. A few Makefiles where not
included as they contain Latin-1 characters that break the Phabricator
workflow. Categories J-L.
CR: D305
Approved by: portmgr (swills)
- Update devel/gettext to 0.18.3
- Fix known-broken (from exp-runs) ports
- Clean up a lot of cruft in the devel/gettext port itself,
based on work from tijl@
PR: 178883
Submitted by: ade
Sponsored by: Wadsworth 6X
It brings bison as a build dependency in case it is set the following way:
USES= bison or USES= bison:build
it brings bison as a run dependency in case it is set the following way:
USES= bison:run
it brings bison both as a run and build dependency in case it the set the following way:
USES= bison:both
While here trim some headers
Convert some USE_GNOME= gnomehack to USES= pathfix
- Make all files in ${DATADIR} loadable by filename without an explicit path,
and without setting MAUDE_LIB. Currently only
${DATADIR}/prelude.maude is loaded (during startup).
- Add option FULL_MAUDE (default: on) for user convenience. This
installs full-maude26b.maude into ${DATADIR}.
- previous maintainer turns port over to committer
PR: ports/162955
Submitted by: joemann@beefree.free.de
Reviewed by: info@rickvanderzwet.nl
Approved by: maintainer, gabor(mentor)
Feature safe: yes
Maude 2.3 is compiles under 4.2 again, so port does not
need to be marked as broken anymore.
Quite a few hacks to get it installing properly:
* Coder forgot to include the *.maude files into the
Makefile.am while porting files into the MixFix directory
to Main directory. Included again, which explains the current
need of aclocal and automake to regenerate the Makefiles
* Project requires MAUDE_LIB env to be set to the location
of %%DATADIR%% which is quite cumbersome, introduced
MAUDE_DATA_DIR into the code to get rid of the non handy
environment variable.
PR: ports/126438
Submitted by: Rick van der Zwet <rick@wzoeterwoude.net>
Maude is a high-performance reflective language and system supporting both
equational and rewriting logic specification and programming for a wide range
of applications. Maude has been influenced in important ways by the OBJ3
language, which can be regarded as an equational logic sublanguage. Besides
supporting equational specification and programming, Maude also supports
rewriting logic computation.
Rewriting logic is a logic of concurrent change that can naturally deal with
state and with concurrent computations. It has good properties as a general
semantic framework for giving executable semantics to a wide range of
languages and models of concurrency. In particular, it supports very well
concurrent object-oriented computation. The same reasons making rewriting
logic a good semantic framework make it also a good logical framework, that
is, a metalogic in which many other logics can be naturally represented and
executed.
Maude supports in a systematic and efficient way logical reflection. This
makes Maude remarkably extensible and powerful, supports an extensible algebra
of module composition operations, and allows many advanced metaprogramming and
metalanguage applications. Indeed, some of the most interesting applications
of Maude are metalanguage applications, in which Maude is used to create
executable environments for different logics, theorem provers, languages, and
models of computation.
WWW: http://maude.cs.uiuc.edu/
PR: ports/94986
Submitted by: Rick van der Zwet <rick@traffie.wzoeterwoude.net>