2005-07-13 20:01:49 by Johnny C. Lam | Files touched by this commit (578) |
Log message:
Turn PERL5_PACKLIST into a relative path instead of an absolute path.
These paths are now relative to PERL5_PACKLIST_DIR, which currently
defaults to ${PERL5_SITEARCH}. There is no change to the binary
packages.
|
2005-07-09 18:12:33 by Adrian Portelli | Files touched by this commit (2) |
Log message:
- Update to 1.23
- Change to my NetBSD address
- From the Changelog:
> 1.23 Mon Jun 06 12:00:00 2005
> - Thanks to Achim Adam <achim.adam AT univie.ac.at>
> - Thanks to Malte S. Stretz <mss AT msquadrat.de>
> - Thanks to Ville Skytta <ville.skytta AT iki.fi>
> - Bugfixes in ip_reverse
> - Bugfix in ip_range_to_prefix for /31 subnets
>
>
> 1.22 Mon May 26 11:54:00 2005
> - Big Thanks to Achim Adam <achim.adam AT univie.ac.at>
> - Removed 5.008 dependency
> - Added fix for trailing zeros on reverse IPv4 addresses
> - Updated 'special' ranges for Ipv4 and IPv6
|
2005-04-11 23:48:17 by Todd Vierling | Files touched by this commit (3539) |
Log message:
Remove USE_BUILDLINK3 and NO_BUILDLINK; these are no longer used.
|
2004-12-20 12:31:14 by grant beattie | Files touched by this commit (467) |
Log message:
since perl is now built with threads on most platforms, the perl archlib
module directory has changed (eg. "darwin-2level" vs.
"darwin-thread-multi-2level").
binary packages of perl modules need to be distinguishable between
being built against threaded perl and unthreaded perl, so bump the
PKGREVISION of all perl module packages and introduce
BUILDLINK_RECOMMENDED for perl as perl>=5.8.5nb5 so the correct
dependencies are registered and the binary packages are distinct.
addresses PR pkg/28619 from H. Todd Fujinaka.
|
2004-02-23 17:00:18 by Min Sik Kim | Files touched by this commit (1) |
Log message:
This package requires Perl v5.8.0.
|
2004-02-17 05:28:25 by Min Sik Kim | Files touched by this commit (4) | |
Log message:
Import p5-Net-IP from pkgsrc-wip. Packaged by Adrian Portelli, and
slightly modified by me.
This is the Net::IP module, designed to allow easy manipulation of
IPv4 and IPv6 addresses.
|