Also only set ARCHFLAGS on non-Core Duo machines... though it seemed to build
fine even with it, it doenst make much sense to me... these changes are kind
of up for debate but it "works for me" this way...
ClosesHomebrew/homebrew#75
It's a lost cause trying to get 1.0beta3 compiling under Snow Leopard,
and the trunk already compiles 64-bit clean, so we might as well
use that.
Note that the DATA patch makes a few changes that are then rewritten
by inreplace. Why not patch clean and not run inreplace later? Because
I'm going to submit the patch back upstream, which should hopefully
allow us to drop it from the formula and only use inreplace to select
our build environment (native arch and framework for either 10.5 or 10.6)
I had to remove the THREADSAFE flag to make it work.
Couchdb seems the reason to use Spidermonkey at this point. Without these
changes Couchdb would crash hard when loading the Spidermonkey dylib.
If the threadsafety is required then we should look into making a keg-only
Spidermonkey for Couchdb's personal use.
The nspr dependency isn't documented as required, and doesn't seem to make a
difference if it is removed. So I removed it.
Parrot is a virtual machine designed to efficiently compile
and execute bytecode for dynamic languages. Parrot currently
hosts a variety of language implementations in various stages
of completion, including Tcl, Javascript, Ruby, Lua, Scheme,
PHP, Python, Perl 6, APL, and a .NET bytecode translator.
The parrot binary needs patching to find its library.
We don't want beta libs and Erlang doesn't need it.
Also disabled installation of erlang docs as we just delete them, we need to make the delete step optional.
The JasPer Project is an open-source initiative to provide a free software-based
reference implementation of the codec specified in the JPEG-2000 Part-1 standard
(i.e., ISO/IEC 15444-1).
The WeeChat devs don't know about CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX apparently, someone
should tell them. I won't. I plan on just sitting back and shacking my head
side-to-side instead.
ccache is a compiler cache. It acts as a caching pre-processor to C/C++
compilers, using the -E compiler switch and a hash to detect when a
compilation can be satisfied from cache. This often results in a 5 to 10 times
speedup in common compilations.
GNU Emacs is an extensible, customizable text editor—and more. At
its core is an interpreter for Emacs Lisp, a dialect of the Lisp
programming language with extensions to support text editing.