move settings back to /system/settings and adjust documentation
create crond user for the daemon to use
fix sendmail paths
fix standard PATH variable for jobs
This is in order to clarify that this is not the "official" htop,
but a fork based on an older version, and that has since diverged.
- Enable build on 64 bits.
- Drop "-x86" suffix on 32 bits binary.
- Make it CONFLICT with "htop", effectively replacing it at install,
and just in case we get a recipe for the "official" htop.
(might just rename the provided `cmd:htop` instead in that case).
x86_64 is used as a baseline: the "x86_64" entry, whatever status it has,
is transformed into "all", and then the other entries in ARCHITECTURES
either dropped or rearranged appropriately.
* avrdude
SUMMARY must have at least 3 words
* bebook
SUMMARY must have at least 3 words
Re-ordered blocks
* bzflag
SUMMARY must have at least 3 words
Re-ordered blocks
* c_ares
SUMMARY must start with capital letter
Re-ordered blocks
* cmake
SUMMARY must have at least 3 words
Re-ordered blocks
* command_not_found
SUMMARY must have at least 3 words
Added BUILD_PREREQUIRES
Re-ordered blocks
* confuse
SUMMARY must start with capital letter
Re-ordered blocks
* cream
SUMMARY must start with capital letter
Re-ordered blocks
* croscorefonts
SUMMARY must have at least 3 words
Re-ordered blocks
* cssselect
SUMMARY must start with capital letter
Re-ordered blocks
* dcron
SUMMARY must start with capital letter
Re-ordered blocks
* eggchess
SUMMARY must have at least 3 words
Re-ordered blocks
* Referring the current haiku version explicitly is not needed, since
the RequiresUpdater takes care of setting the version of Haiku used
for building a package.
There doesn't seem to be a way to autostart the daemon on boot (unless
we directly modify the boot script). Assume the user will do that
himself by adding to ~/config/settings/boot/.
crond needs to be told where to store the crontab and cronstamps file,
and where to read the cron files. The default values are non-existing
folders in /var and /etc (just creating those is ok, too).