| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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POSIX explicitly allows using a different default pager if that is
documented. Nowadays, the pager provided in most operating systems
is less(1). Our man(1) implementation uses less(1) features that
traditional more(1) did not provide, in particular tagging. Besides,
as noted by deraadt@, the user interface of less(1) is slightly
more refined and preferable over the user inferface of more(1).
This switch was originally suggested by Ian Ropers.
In ./configure, test whether less(1) is available. If not, fall
back to more(1). In ./configure.local, support overriding the
automatic test by setting BINM_PAGER.
As explained by jmc@ and deraadt@, the -s flag was added a very
long time ago when an antique version of groff(1) had an annoying
bug in terminal output that would randomly display blank lines in
the middle of pages. Clearly, -s has no longer been needed for
many years, so drop it from the default pager invocation.
OK deraadt@ jmc@ martijn@ job@ on the OpenBSD version of this patch.
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Looking at version numbers like __GNUC__ is always a bad idea.
Believe it or not, this even makes ./configure shorter by one line.
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That's cleaner and it is supposed to fix compiler warnings with gcc 10
reported by Wynn Wolf Arbor <wolf at oriole dot systems> on discuss@.
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* three rather than four arguments for singletest()
* let runtest() support testing two variants of compiler flags
* always report a failed test, even when another test follows
* run all tests before detecting fatal conditions
* rename HAVE_CMSG_XPG42 to NEED_XPG4_2 for consistency
* consistently use braces for shell variable interpolation
* drop archaic "X${" syntax and unusual "==" in string comparisons
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by having it run ./configure with native fts and ohash disabled.
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That line was a bad idea in the first place, it tried to be too clever,
and it failed in different ways on different platforms. Even when it
succeeded, what make(1) considered the default wasn't always useful.
Having a simple and robust default and asking users to override it
when needed is better.
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patch from Michal Nowak <mnowak at startmail dot com>
who found these with git pbchk in the illumos tree
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default /bin/sh on Solaris 10, so use the classical form
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needed for Alpine Linux because it uses busybox less(1) by default;
based on a patch from Daniel Sabogal explained to me by Natanael Copa
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name is not found and the requested architecture is unknown, complain
about the architecture rather than about the manual page name:
$ man -S vax cpu
man: Unknown architecture "vax".
$ man -S sparc64 foobar
man: No entry for foobar in the manual.
Friendlier error message suggested by jmc@, who also OK'ed the patch.
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latter is a NetBSD idiosyncrasy reported by wiz@. Also take into
account that NetBSD declares getsubopt(3) in the wrong header.
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autodetect whether the compiler can use -W and -static,
clearer output from ./configure,
and adjust some configuration instructions
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Jan Stary reports that MacOS X Snow Leopard and older lacks it.
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in the base system, inspired by mdoclint(1).
We are able to do this because (1) the -mdoc parser, the -Tlint validator,
and the man(1) manual page lookup code are all in the same program
and (2) the mandoc.db(5) database format allows fast lookup.
Feedback from, previous versions tested by, and OK jmc@.
A few features will be added to this in the tree, step by step.
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inside individual table cells that contain text blocks.
This cures overlong lines in various Xenocara manuals.
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but also for program files.
Issue reported by Michael <Stapelberg at debian dot org>
and by Markus <Waldeck at gmx dot de>.
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This is simple and seems to help the NetBSD build infrastructure.
From Christos Zoulas <christos at NetBSD>.
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Suggested by Michael <Stapelberg@debian.org>.
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needed for Solaris 11
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for development in the tree, not yet ready for production
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the people at Alpine Linux, gcc 6 seems to fail when it's at the
beginning. From Daniel Sabogal via http://git.alpinelinux.org.
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The only environment where it is ever needed is NetBSD base.
Even NetBSD ports and pkgsrc should better not install it.
Triggered by a question from bentley@.
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which differs from what most other systems use.
While here, improve diagnostic output of ./configure tests.
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pass it the POSIX -s option. On most systems, this won't make a
difference, but Bdale Garbee reported that the make(1) on his Debian
system, most likely some version of gmake, breaks Makefile.local
by printing some 'entering directory' messages. I failed to reproduce
and Bdale didn't report back, but judging from gmake source code,
this is likely to help and unlikely to do harm elsewhere.
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respective conversion functions are not yet properly standardized.
Rumour has it that POSIX is working on it, though.
For now, sprinkle some configuration glue.
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Found by Aaron M. Ucko <amu at alum dot mit dot edu> on the GNU Hurd,
via Bdale Garbee, https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=829624
Also add EFTYPE at two places where it was forgotten.
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and allow overriding it manually.
Based on a patch from Svyatoslav Mishyn <juef at openmailbox dot org>
tweaked by me.
The idea originally came up in a conversation with Markus Waldeck.
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Helpful for Solaris 9 and 10.
Reminded by Thomas Klausner.
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delete manpath(1) support. With the mandoc-based man(1), manpath(1)
is utterly useless. Just set MANPATH_DEFAULT in configure.local
for sane operating system defaults, use man.conf(5) for machine-
specific modifications, and use ${MANPATH}, -m, and -M for user
preferences.
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Stop supporting systems that don't have mmap(3).
Drop the obsolete names_check() now that we deleted MLINKS.
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Triggered by a smaller patch from Christos Zoulas.
While here, unify style, move several config tests to config.h,
and delete the useless MANDOC_CONFIG_H.
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noticed by Christos Zoulas with -Wmissing-prototypes
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Sevan Janiyan found during testing on AIX that ${CC} could leak in.
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is marked as DEPRECATED in OS X after 2011 or so, but has not been
removed and has no replacement.
ok schwarze@
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suggested by Christian Neukirchen <chneukirchen at gmail dot com>
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reported that the build system still assumed that ohash is only
needed if sqlite3 is also in use, which is no longer true:
The ohash library is now required no matter what.
Rework sqlite3 and ohash library autodetection
such that both work independently of each other.
Provide LDADD for additional linker flags.
Add some missing variables to configure.local.example.
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like preparing queries or binding variables fail; that won't yield
useful results anyway but may generate huge pointless error messages.
Issue reported by deraadt@.
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even though that's required by POSIX.
Use -w and -r, that's just as good.
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for systems lacking it
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Use the POSIX function getline(3) rather than the slightly
dangerous BSD function fgetln(3).
Remove the related compatibility code.
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Because these work slightly differently on different systems,
they are becoming a maintenance burden in the portable version,
so delete them.
Besides, one of the chief design goals of the mandoc toolbox is to
make sure that nothing related to documentation requires C++.
Consequently, linking mandoc against any kind of C++ program would
defeat the purpose and is not supported.
I don't understand why kristaps@ added them in the first place.
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noticed by Peter Bray <pdb_ml at yahoo dot com dot au>
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issue reported by Svyatoslav Mishyn, Peter Bray, and Daniel Levai.
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Suggested by Joerg@ Sonnenberger (NetBSD).
Last year, deraadt@ confirmed on tech@ that this "has the potential
to be more portable", and micro-optimizing for speed is not relevant
here. Also gets rid of one global variable.
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That's more readable and less error-prone than fumbling around
with argv[0], fprintf(3), strerror(3), perror(3), and exit(3).
It's a bad idea to boycott good interfaces merely because standards
committees ignore them. Instead, let's provide compatibility modules
for archaic systems (like commercial Solaris) that still don't have
them. The compat module has an UCB Copyright (c) 1993...
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