Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
* | Upgrade to 0.6.6. | tg | 2000-08-23 | 3 | -1071/+1352 |
| | |||||
* | PORTNAME/PORTVERSION update | mharo | 2000-04-12 | 1 | -3/+3 |
| | |||||
* | Upgrade to 0.6.5. | tg | 2000-02-22 | 3 | -123/+201 |
| | |||||
* | Add WWW: | dirk | 2000-02-14 | 1 | -0/+2 |
| | |||||
* | Upgrade to 0.6.0. | tg | 1999-09-09 | 3 | -597/+662 |
| | |||||
* | The tiff port now lives in ports/graphics/tiff. | steve | 1999-09-07 | 1 | -1/+1 |
| | |||||
* | FreeBSD.ORG -> FreeBSD.org | mharo | 1999-08-31 | 1 | -2/+2 |
| | | | | | Prompted by PR: 13476, 13477 Submitted by: KATO Tsuguru | ||||
* | Make this port a little more sane. It was broken | cpiazza | 1999-08-29 | 2 | -64/+42 |
| | | | | | | | | | for any system that wasn't x86 on freebsd 3.1. The port is still marked BROKEN because it sets PREFIX in the Makefile. PR: 13423 Submitted by: Ade Lovett <ade@lovett.com> | ||||
* | Change Id->FreeBSD. | obrien | 1999-08-25 | 1 | -1/+1 |
| | |||||
* | Change all ports that need a new gcc on 3.x to use USE_NEWGCC. | cpiazza | 1999-08-23 | 1 | -5/+2 |
| | |||||
* | egcc/eg++ have been renamed to gcc295/g++295. Change | cpiazza | 1999-08-18 | 1 | -4/+4 |
| | | | | | | | all the ports that use them accordingly. PR: 13205 Submitted by: Ade Lovett <ade@lovett.com> | ||||
* | BROKEN= "Hardcoded FreeBSD release numbers in PLIST" | cpiazza | 1999-07-18 | 1 | -1/+3 |
| | | | | I'll fix this in a little while. | ||||
* | Give this port a USE_XLIB so it'll link. Also move the CC=egcc | cpiazza | 1999-07-18 | 1 | -2/+4 |
| | | | | | into the ${OSVERSION} check so it'll actually compile on -current with egcs. | ||||
* | As threatened, enforce the "Capital, no period" rule. Ellipses are | hoek | 1999-06-27 | 1 | -1/+1 |
| | | | | | permitted. Note that, given current numeric motif of PW, this is done in four equally-sized commits of 393 files each. | ||||
* | New port gnustep. GNUstep is a set of general-purpose Objective-C libraries | tg | 1999-05-10 | 5 | -0/+1010 |
base on the OpenStep standard developed by NeXT (now Apple) Inc. |