r358062(ncurses) breaks installed ports, howto check?
Thomas Dickey
dickey at his.com
Tue Feb 25 01:28:07 UTC 2020
On Mon, Feb 24, 2020 at 06:35:16PM -0500, Thomas Dickey wrote:
> On Mon, Feb 24, 2020 at 06:25:30PM -0500, Thomas Dickey wrote:
> > On Tue, Feb 25, 2020 at 04:37:11AM +0900, Yasuhiro KIMURA wrote:
> > > From: "O. Hartmann" <ohartmann at walstatt.org>
> > > Subject: r358062(ncurses) breaks installed ports, howto check?
> > > Date: Mon, 24 Feb 2020 20:19:59 +0100
> > >
> > > > After r358062, many installed ports do not work anymore on several running systems (CURRENT).
> > > > /usr/src/UPDATING states one should reinstall all ncurses depending ports, but no hint is
> > > > given! Can someone mitigate this lack of information? Is there a simple way to check what
> > > > ports installed on a system rely on ncurses provided by the system?
> > >
> > > Check thread starting with following message.
> > >
> > > https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-ports/2020-February/117710.html
> >
> > That's a start, but it gives an overly-broad approach, saying that
> > anything linked to the ncurses library has to be recompiled.
> >
> > The ABI change is just to the (upper-level) curses interface.
> > Most of the programs you'll have in ports use the (lower-level) termcap
> > or terminfo interfaces.
> >
> > For example gettext uses terminfo (not curses).
> >
> > Curses applications use initscr or newterm (nm helps).
> > I have a script which uses nm to tell me which interface is used.
> >
> > Actually, in my own ports, I don't see any which would be affected,
> > since all of the curses applications are the utilities for ncurses
> > (or for my testing of ncurses).
> >
> > Here's an example of what it tells me
> > (n5==ncurses5, tc=termcap, ti=terminfo):
> >
> > ti bison
> > n5*+ti captoinfo
> > n5*+ti captoinfo6
> > n5*+ti clear
> > n5*+ti clear6
> > n5+tc ded
> > n5+ti dialog4ports
>
> actually this one isn't one of mine (needs to be recompiled)
>
> But for the rest - recompiling would be a waste of time.
...that's just looking at /usr/local/bin. I see Millard's list
includes /usr/local/lib. I have some of those:
c3+tc libXvMCr600.so
tc libedit.so
tc libedit.so.0
ti libgettextsrc.so
tc libreadline.so
tc libslang.so
ti libtextstyle.so
c3+tc libvulkan_radeon.so
that is, mesa-dri uses curses, but libedit and libreadline do not.
I have llvm80, but that doesn't live in either of /usr/local/bin
or /usr/local/lib. It's in its own directory (with a script in
the former pointing there). It uses curses (and is not a quick
recompile).
--
Thomas E. Dickey <dickey at invisible-island.net>
https://invisible-island.net
ftp://ftp.invisible-island.net
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: signature.asc
Type: application/pgp-signature
Size: 195 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-current/attachments/20200224/3f7fafd1/attachment.sig>
More information about the freebsd-current
mailing list