void-packages/templates/git.tmpl
Juan RP e9def74b60 Mega patch to improve how build dependencies are handled and
how packages are found.

First: I removed all these *-deps.db files and only a single file
is used now "build-depends.db"; it's smaller and will be easier
to handle in the future... when "run-depends.db" is added :-)

Second: there's no need to specify version of package anymore;
before you had to do:

	$ pkgfs.sh install git-1.6.0.2

now you only do:

	$ pkgfs.sh install git

This will read the variables located at PKGFS_TEMPLATESDIR/git.tmpl
and will the install the version that is there.

--HG--
extra : convert_revision : 9e3e5d70965a69c76f59e322b7c7b674d627af52
2008-10-04 06:29:49 +02:00

24 lines
1.1 KiB
Cheetah
Executable file

# Template build file for 'git".
pkgname=git
version=1.6.0.2
extract_sufx=".tar.bz2"
url=http://www.kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git
build_style=gnu_configure
configure_env="CURLDIR=$PKGFS_MASTERDIR"
configure_args="--with-shell=/bin/sh --with-perl=$PKGFS_MASTERDIR/bin/perl
--with-curl --without-tcltk --with-expat"
make_cmd="$PKGFS_MASTERDIR/bin/gmake"
short_desc="GIT Tree History Storage Tool"
maintainer="Daniel Horecki <morr@morr.pl>"
checksum=eb91ca256d0fbcc956f91ad02da659d9b322261d
long_desc="
GIT is a \"directory content manager\" designed to handle absolutely massive
projects with speed and efficiency, and the release of the 2.6.12 (and later)
versions of the Linux kernel as well as more and more other projects switching
to it would indicate that it does this task well.
GIT falls in the category of distributed version control software, similar
to e.g. GNU Arch or Monotone (or, in the commercial world, BitKeeper). Every
GIT working directory is a full-fledged repository with full revision tracking
capabilities, not dependent on network access to a central server."