FreeBSD's sed(1) doesn't support using "\n" to insert a newline,
so the installed default.xml file ends up containing a literal
"n" between tags; to work around this problem, add a tr(1)
invocation as suggested by the sed FAQ[1].

[1] http://sed.sourceforge.net/sedfaq4.html (4.1 c)
---
 src/Makefile.am | 5 +++--
 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)

diff --git a/src/Makefile.am b/src/Makefile.am
index c639e37..f020545 100644
--- a/src/Makefile.am
+++ b/src/Makefile.am
@@ -3072,8 +3072,9 @@ if WITH_NETWORK
        $(INSTALL_DATA) $(srcdir)/network/default.xml \
          $(DESTDIR)$(confdir)/qemu/networks/default.xml
        test -z "$(UUID)" || \
-         { sed -e "s,</name>,</name>\n  <uuid>$(UUID)</uuid>," \
-             $(DESTDIR)$(confdir)/qemu/networks/default.xml > \
+         { sed -e "s,</name>,</name>;  <uuid>$(UUID)</uuid>," \
+             $(DESTDIR)$(confdir)/qemu/networks/default.xml | \
+             tr ";" "\n" > \
              $(DESTDIR)$(confdir)/qemu/networks/default.xml.t && \
            cp $(DESTDIR)$(confdir)/qemu/networks/default.xml.t \
              $(DESTDIR)$(confdir)/qemu/networks/default.xml && \
-- 
2.5.5

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