If the port installs one or more shared libraries, define
      a USE_LDCONFIG make variable, which will
      instruct a bsd.port.mk to run
      ${LDCONFIG} -m on the directory
      where the new library is installed (usually
      PREFIX/lib) during
      post-install target to register it
      into the shared library cache.  This variable, when defined,
      will also facilitate addition of an appropriate
      @exec /sbin/ldconfig -m and
      @unexec /sbin/ldconfig -R pair into
      pkg-plist, so that a user who
      installed the package can start using the shared library
      immediately and de-installation will not cause the system to
      still believe the library is there.
USE_LDCONFIG= yes
The default directory can be overridden by
      setting USE_LDCONFIG to a list of
      directories into which shared libraries are to be installed.
      For example, if the port installs shared libraries into
      PREFIX/lib/foo and
      PREFIX/lib/bar
      use this in
      Makefile:
USE_LDCONFIG=	${PREFIX}/lib/foo ${PREFIX}/lib/barPlease double-check, often this is not necessary at all or
      can be avoided through -rpath or setting
      LD_RUN_PATH during linking (see
      lang/mosml for an
      example), or through a shell-wrapper which sets
      LD_LIBRARY_PATH before invoking the binary,
      like www/seamonkey
      does.
When installing 32-bit libraries on 64-bit system, use
      USE_LDCONFIG32 instead.
If the software uses autotools, and specifically
      libtool, add USES=libtool.
When the major library version number increments in the
      update to the new port version, all other ports that link to
      the affected library must have their
      PORTREVISION incremented, to force
      recompilation with the new library version.
All FreeBSD documents are available for download at https://download.freebsd.org/ftp/doc/
Questions that are not answered by the
    documentation may be
    sent to <freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.org>.
    Send questions about this document to <freebsd-doc@FreeBSD.org>.