Date: Sat, 20 Jan 2007 09:59:47 -0800 From: Paul Hoffman <phoffman@proper.com> To: "Scot Hetzel" <swhetzel@gmail.com> Cc: freeBSD-ports@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Modifying a port and keeping the mods across updates Message-ID: <p06240844c1d80886acef@[10.20.30.108]> In-Reply-To: <790a9fff0701192137y703108i421c05422eda39a7@mail.gmail.com> References: <p06240841c1d75354626b@10.20.30.108> <790a9fff0701192137y703108i421c05422eda39a7@mail.gmail.com>
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At 11:37 PM -0600 1/19/07, Scot Hetzel wrote: >On 1/19/07, Paul Hoffman <phoffman@proper.com> wrote: >>Greetings again. I have a two-part question that may be a ports FAQ, >>but I couldn't find such a beast. >> >>(1) For a particular port, I need to change the the MAKE_ENV to make >>it build the way I want. What is the proper way to do this that will >>live beyond the next time I do a cvsup? That is, editing the Makefile >>works just fine, but I want something that will live if the Makefile >>gets reverted. >> >Use the sysutils/portconf port and define the apporiate variable in >PREFIX/etc/ports.conf. This isn't working for me. I installed the port and created /usr/local/etc/ports.conf. I added the line: security/nss: NSS_ENABLE_ECC=1 | BUILD_OPT=1 But building security/nss still builds without those in the make environment. If I add NSS_ENABLE_ECC=1 in the Makefile, I can see it reflected in the cc lines during make; if I try to just ue the /usr/local/etc/ports.conf, I don't. Clues? --Paul Hoffman
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