man(1): Lots of cleanup. Remove 'register', ansify, remove dead code for Xenix and whatnot etc. No functional changes. Raise WARNS to 6.
gcc(1): Fix compilation with "c++ -pg" (for CCVER=gcc41). We don't install profiling libraries as /usr/lib/lib${LIB}_p.a anymore since it was switched to /usr/lib/profile/lib${LIB}.a almost 5 years ago (in c4c23d9061b6eb2a3456620a48b84583b00fe0ce). Reported-by: Damian Weber <dweber@htw-saarland.de>
Adjust some more to the recent groff 1.20.1 import. * Dx is now a built in macro, so remove our local definition. But the version supplied with groff still doesn't work correctly due to a missing register declaration in doc-common. Fix that locally for now (patch sent upstream). * Sync various definitions (standards, operating systems) with doc-common and doc-syms, i.e. remove our local definitions where they are part of groff now.
groff: Update master to work with v1.20.1 * updated patches to apply cleanly * removed one obsolete patch
kgdb - Fix kernel trapframe backtraces for i386 * A recent gdb update removed our stack frame sniffer hooks, add them back in for i386. * I got trapframe to work properly for i386. I dunno about interrupt frames.
rename amd64 architecture to x86_64 The rest of the world seems to call amd64 x86_64. Bite the bullet and rename all of the architecture files and references. This will hopefully make pkgsrc builds less painful. Discussed-with: dillon@
Revert "rename amd64 architecture to x86_64" This reverts commit c1543a890188d397acca9fe7f76bcd982481a763. I'm reverting it because: 1) the change didn't get properly discussed 2) it was based on false premises: "The rest of the world seems to call amd64 x86_64." 3) no pkgsrc bulk build was done to test the change 4) the original committer acted irresponsibly by committing such a big change just before going on vacation.
rename amd64 architecture to x86_64 The rest of the world seems to call amd64 x86_64. Bite the bullet and rename all of the architecture files and references. This will hopefully make pkgsrc builds less painful. Discussed-with: dillon@