For some reason, whenever OSMajorVersion was >= 2 (this equates to a
2.x kernel or above), yacc would be used instead of bison.
On Ubuntu, and probably other linux systems, yacc is just a shell
wrapper around bison, so let's just use that directly.
Docs (help and the dtinfo guides) are now always built using the
ISO8859-1 locale. To support UTF-8, our docbook needs to be updated
to something from this century, ideally this decade. In addition, a
conversion to XML would also be required as a result. So, until that
happens, use ISO8859-1 for docs.
However, other locale information, like message catalogs, resource
files, and the like are now converted to UTF-8.
All supported languages are now built by default on linux again.
Without this, you cannot use the command line to select the languages
to build, you would have to edit site.def directly.
With this fix, you can build a language on linux with something like:
make World IMAKE_DEFINES='-DDtLocalesToBuild="de_DE.ISO8859-1 es_ES.ISO8859-1"'
to build the DE (German) and es (Spanish) locales.
This commit removes the need to setup X11 and motif import symlinks
before building CDE. With OpenBSD v6+, the installed versions of X11 and
Motif will be used.
This may work with earlier versions of OpenBSD as well, but I don't
have access to those older versions. If you try it, and it works,
send a patch to the CDE mailing list.
This was tested on OpenBSD 6.2
With this patch, the import symlinks for x11 and motif do not need to
be created. The build will use the installed headers in
/usr/local/include/{X11, Xm}.
This will work for FreeBSD 11 only ATM as I don't have older systems
to test with.
It may work for FreeBSD 10 or earlier versions as well. If so, edit
config/cf/FreeBSD.cf and change the OSMajorVersion check for
UseInstalledX11 appropriately. And send a patch to the CDE mailing
list :)