# -*- coding: utf-8; mode: tcl; tab-width: 4; indent-tabs-mode: nil; c-basic-offset: 4 -*- vim:fenc=utf-8:ft=tcl:et:sw=4:ts=4:sts=4 # $Id: Portfile 99643 2012-11-13 04:26:02Z singingwolfboy@macports.org $ PortSystem 1.0 name sortu categories sysutils version 2.1.2 platforms darwin license ISC maintainers nomaintainer description sort-unique long_description \ The sortu program is a replacement for the sort and uniq programs. It is \ common for Unix script writers to want to count how many separate patterns \ are in a file. For example, if you have a list of addresses, you may want to \ see how many are from each state. So you cut out the state part, sort these, \ and then pass them through uniq -c. Sortu does all this for you in a fraction \ of the time. \n\n\ \ Sortu uses a hash table and some decent line processing to provide this \ functionality. For a relatively small number of keys, it can be significantly \ smaller than using sort, because it does not have to keep temporary files. \ If you are dealing with a large number of unique keys then sortu will run \ out of memory and stop. Sortu has some basic field and delimiter handling \ which should do most basic awk or cut features to separate out the field that \ you are sorting on. homepage http://256.com/sources/sortu/ master_sites http://256.com/sources/sortu/ extract.suffix .tgz use_configure no checksums rmd160 7505634f0e70e4004205437f4b5ddb8e962a22b9 \ sha256 eb42c4bc314996db27e0db7d7f04432ddf6ce2f34a316b1d3f2c4ba89c165ead variant universal {} build.args CC="${configure.cc} [get_canonical_archflags]" destroot { xinstall -m 755 ${worksrcpath}/${name} ${destroot}${prefix}/bin/${name} set docdir ${destroot}${prefix}/share/doc/${name} xinstall -d ${docdir} xinstall -m 644 -W ${worksrcpath} \ README.txt \ ChangeLog \ ${docdir} }