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CVS commit: pkgsrc/devel/automake
Module Name: pkgsrc
Committed By: wiz
Date: Sat May 18 14:48:24 UTC 2013
Modified Files:
pkgsrc/devel/automake: Makefile PLIST distinfo
Log Message:
Update to 1.13.2:
* WARNING: New versioning scheme for Automake.
- Starting with this version onward, Automake will use an update and
more rational versioning scheme, one that will allow users to know
which kind of changes can be expected from a new version, based on
its version number.
+ Micro versions (e.g., 1.13.3, 2.0.1, 3.2.8) will introduce only
documentation updates and bug and regression fixes; they will
not introduce new features, nor any backward-incompatibility (any
such incompatibility would be considered a bug, to be fixed with
a further micro release).
+ Minor versions (e.g., 1.14, 2.1) can introduce new backward
compatible features; the only backward-incompatibilities allowed
in such a release are new *non-fatal* deprecations and warnings,
and possibly fixes for old or non-trivial bugs (or even inefficient
behaviours) that could unfortunately have been seen, and used, by
some developers as "corner case features". Possible disruptions
caused by this kind of fixes should hopefully be quite rare.
+ Major versions (now expected to be released every 18 or 24 months,
and not more often) can introduce new big features (possibly with
rough edges and not-fully-stabilized APIs), removal of deprecated
features, backward-incompatible changes of behaviour, and possibly
major refactorings (that, while ideally transparent to the user,
could introduce new bugs). Incompatibilities should however not
be introduced gratuitously and abruptly; a proper deprecation path
should be duly implemented in the preceding minor releases.
- According to this new scheme, the next major version of Automake
(the one that has until now been labelled as '1.14') will actually
become "Automake 2.0". Automake 1.14 will be the next minor version,
which will introduce new features, deprecations and bug fixes, but
no real backward incompatibility.
- See discussion about automake bug#13578 for more details and
background: <http://debbugs.gnu.org/cgi/bugreport.cgi?bug=13578>
* WARNING: Future backward-incompatibilities!
- Automake 2.0 will require Autoconf 2.70 or later (which is still
unreleased at the moment of writing, but is planned to be released
before Automake 2.0 is).
- Automake 2.0 will drop support for the long-deprecated 'configure.in'
name for the Autoconf input file. You are advised to start using the
recommended name 'configure.ac' instead, ASAP.
- The ACLOCAL_AMFLAGS special make variable will be fully deprecated
in Automake 2.0 (where it will raise warnings in the "obsolete"
category). You are advised to start relying on the new Automake
support for AC_CONFIG_MACRO_DIRS instead (which was introduced in
Automake 1.13).
- Automake 2.0 will remove support for automatic dependency tracking
with the SGI C/C++ compilers on IRIX. The SGI depmode has been
reported broken "in the wild" already, and we don't think investing
time in debugging and fixing is worthwhile, especially considering
that SGI has last updated those compilers in 2006, and is expected
to retire support for them in December 2013:
<http://www.sgi.com/services/support/irix_mips_support.html>
- Future versions of Automake might remove support for MS-DOS and
Windows 95/98/ME (support for them was offered by relying on the
DJGPP project). Note however that both Cygwin and MSYS/MinGW on
modern Windows versions will continue to be fully supported.
- Automake-provided scripts and makefile recipes might (finally!)
start assuming a POSIX shell in Automake 2.0.
- Starting from Automake 2.0, third-party m4 files located in the
system-wide aclocal directory, as well as in any directory listed
in the ACLOCAL_PATH environment variable, will take precedence
over "built-in" Automake macros. For example (assuming Automake
is installed in the /usr/local hierarchy), a definition of the
AM_PROG_VALAC macro found in '/usr/local/share/aclocal/my-vala.m4'
should take precedence over the same-named automake-provided macro
(defined in '/usr/local/share/aclocal-2.0/vala.m4').
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
New in 1.13.2:
* Obsolescent features:
- Use of suffix-less info files (that can be specified through the
'@setfilename' macro in Texinfo input files) is discouraged, and
its use will raise warnings in the 'obsolete' category.
- Use of Texinfo input files with '.txi' or '.texinfo' extensions
is discouraged, and its use will raise warnings in the 'obsolete'
category. You are advised to simply use the '.texi' extension
instead.
* Documentation fixes:
- The long-deprecated but still supported two-arguments invocation form
of AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE is documented once again. This seems the sanest
thing to do, given that support for such an usage might need to remain
in place for a unspecified amount of time in order to cater for people
who want to define the version number for their package dynamically at
configure runtime (unfortunately, Autoconf does not yet support this
scenario, so we cannot delegate the work to it).
- The serial testsuite harness is no longer reported as "deprecated",
but as "discouraged". We have no plan to remove it, not to make its
use cause runtime warnings.
- The parallel testsuite is no longer reported as "experimental"; it
is well tested, and should be stable now.
- The 'shar' and 'tarZ' distribution formats and the 'dist-shar' and
'dist-tarZ' options are obsolescent, and their use is deprecated
in the documentation.
- Other minor miscellaneous fixes and improvements; in particular,
some improvements in cross-references.
* Bugs fixed:
- When the 'ustar' option is used, the generated configure script no
longer risks hanging during the tests for the availability of the
'pax' utility, even if the user running configure has a UID or GID
that requires more than 21 bits to be represented.
See automake bug#8343 and bug#13588.
- The obsolete macros AM_CONFIG_HEADER or AM_PROG_CC_STDC work once
again, as they did in Automake 1.12.x (albeit printing runtime
warnings in the 'obsolete' category). Removing them has turned
out to be a very bad idea, because it complicated distro packing
enormously. Making them issue fatal warnings, as we did in
Automake 1.13, has turned out to be a similarly very bad idea,
for exactly the same reason.
- aclocal will no longer error out if the first local m4 directory
(as specified by the '-I' option or the 'AC_CONFIG_MACRO_DIRS' or
'AC_CONFIG_MACRO_DIR' macros) doesn't exist; it will merely report
a warning in the 'unsupported' category. This is done to support
some pre-existing real-world usages. See automake bug#13514.
- aclocal will no longer consider directories for extra m4 files more
than once, even if they are specified multiple times. This ensures
packages that specify both
AC_CONFIG_MACRO_DIR([m4]) in configure.ac
ACLOCAL_AMFLAGS = -I m4 in Makefile.am
will work correctly, even when the 'm4' directory contains no
package-specific files, but is used only to install third-party
m4 files (as can happen with e.g., "libtoolize --install").
See automake bug#13514.
- Analysis of make flags in Automake-generated rules has been made more
robust, and more future-proof. For example, in presence of make that
(like '-I') take an argument, the characters in said argument will no
longer be spuriously considered as a set of additional make options.
In particular, automake-generated rules will no longer spuriously
believe to be running in dry mode ("make -n") if run with an invocation
like "make -I noob"; nor will they believe to be running in keep-going
mode ("make -k") if run with an invocation like "make -I kool"
(automake bug#12554).
To generate a diff of this commit:
cvs rdiff -u -r1.91 -r1.92 pkgsrc/devel/automake/Makefile
cvs rdiff -u -r1.18 -r1.19 pkgsrc/devel/automake/PLIST
cvs rdiff -u -r1.43 -r1.44 pkgsrc/devel/automake/distinfo
Please note that diffs are not public domain; they are subject to the
copyright notices on the relevant files.
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