There are two cases:
- The upstream versionning is compatible with our versionning, or using
DISTVERSION's magic leads to a compatible PORTVERSION, use
DISTVERSION. If it is possible to use DISTVERSIONPREFIX and
DISTVERSIONSUFFIX to make it compatible, use them.
- The upstream versionning is not compatible with our versionning, and
DISTVERSION's magic does not lead to a correct PORTVERSION, then set
PORTVERSION to the equivalent of our versionning, and set DISTNAME.
It is possible to use a third variable where you store upstream's
version and use it to compute PORTVERSION and/or DISTNAME, like the
dns/bind9* ports do.
Sponsored by: Absolight
Since FreeBSD 8.4 and FreeBSD 9.1 make(1) do support :tu and :tl as a
replacement for :U and :L (which has been marked as deprecated)
bmake which is the default on FreeBSD 10+ only support by default
:tu/:tl a hack has been added at the time to support :U and :L to ease
migration. This hack is now not necessary anymore
Note that this makes the ports tree incompatible with make(1) from
FreeBSD 8.3 or earlier
With hat: portmgr
UModPlayer or Universal Module Player is a audio module "tool-chain",
providing you functions to work with modules like playing, exporting,
getting information, and more.
* You can play the supported formats and seek to any order in the
song. You have pause, timer, display, and other standard features.
* You can view the pattern notes while playing.
* Playlist support: you can create playlists, delete or move
individual items in a playlist, import a playlist from the current
directory contents, save a playlist and load a saved playlist...
* You can specify any of the ModPlug options: noise reduction,
megabass, surround, reverb sound options specifying the grade and
the delay of most of the options.
* You can export the audio data of a module to any of the supported
formats
* You can read and export to a file the song builtin message, the
song instrument names and the song sample names.
* Each user of your UNIX box can save all the sound options.
* And much more!
WWW: http://umodplayer.sourceforge.net/