Removed options:
--enable-atomic - removed 9.13.3 (commit 5024)
--enable-fetchlimit - removed pre-bind9
--enable-ipv6 - made default 9.14
--enable-openssl-hash - removed 9.14, default was already yes
--enable-seccomp - removed 9.13.0 (commit 4898)
--enable-sit - removed 9.11, replaced with DNS COOKIE option in configs (commit 4152)
--enable-threads - on-threaded support removed 9.13.3 (commit 5011)
--with-ecdsa - comes from openssl availability (removed 9.14)
--with-eddsa - comes from openssl availability (removed 9.14)
--with-geoip - marked as obsolete in 9.16
--with-randomdev - removed 9.13.0 (commit 4936)
--without-gost - GOST support removed 9.13.1 (commit 4961)
There don't seem to be any new options added that seem like must-haves,
so unless someone speaks up I'm not going to be adding anything right
now.
The issue page from github is long gone. The developer does sketchy stuff
(locks down features in paid version, ignores pull requests, ...).
We only packaged this for Komikku, and it already dropped the dependency a
while ago, so I think it's safe to remove this package.
Both compiler packages depend on it already, and its presence makes it
easy to accidentally create build cycles by putting gcc in the
dependency path when it shouldn't be.
Both compiler packages depend on it already, and its presence makes it
easy to accidentally create build cycles by putting gcc in the
dependency path when it shouldn't be.
Both compiler packages depend on it already, and its presence makes it
easy to accidentally create build cycles by putting gcc in the
dependency path when it shouldn't be.
Don't use '-' for specifying versions, use '>=', which isn't ambiguous.
Both compiler packages depend on it already, and its presence makes it
easy to accidentally create build cycles by putting gcc in the
dependency path when it shouldn't be.
Both compiler packages depend on it already, and its presence makes it
easy to accidentally create build cycles by putting gcc in the
dependency path when it shouldn't be.
Both compiler packages depend on it already, and its presence makes it
easy to accidentally create build cycles by putting gcc in the
dependency path when it shouldn't be.
Both compiler packages depend on it already, and its presence makes it
easy to accidentally create build cycles by putting gcc in the
dependency path when it shouldn't be.