$ emerge -ep system | genlop -p
[...]
Estimated update time: 2 hours, 30 minutes.

$ emerge -ep world | genlop -p
[...]
Estimated update time: 14 hours, 40 minutes.

But genlop is entitled to make mistakes. Those did seem like rather small numbers to me. What would be more realistic? 100 hours?

Mark Shields wrote:

Depending on what you have installed, it will take more than 14 hours. Are you sure they're talking about emerge -e system and not emerge -e world?

On 8/29/05, *Matt Randolph* <[EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>> wrote:

    I know that upgrading glibc can cause some programs to break if they
    were built against the previous glibc.  This happens to me all the
    time
    and I have gotten in the habit of simply re-emerging any packages that
    misbehave since a glibc upgrade.

    Well, I have upgraded both glibc and gcc within the last week or so.
    And I've been contemplating a kernel upgrade too.  I looked at genlop
    and it said it will take a mere fourteen hours to re-emerge everything
    with an emerge -e world.  I'm tempted to do it, but I'm wary of making
    major changes to a system that currently seems to be working
    perfectly.

    However, I've only tested a handful of packages (the ones that I use
    every day) since the glibc upgrade, and I did have to rebuild a few of
    them.  For this reason, I'm guessing that a significant number of the
    packages that I haven't tested are actually broken too.  So when I say
    my system seems to be working perfectly, I think that only applies to
    the packages that I interact with daily and probably not to some
    of the
    ones that I don't.

    When does it make sense to re-emerge everything?  I've heard some
    people
    say never but that others do it perhaps monthly or even more often.

    Is there a (significant) risk that something will go wrong?  Even
    terribly wrong?

    Is it possible that some important programs aren't working right
    now due
    to having been built against an older glibc, and that I'm simply
    oblivious to the fact that they aren't working?  I'm worried
    specifically about system programs that I don't usually have reason to
    interact with, yet may be vitally important to the security and
    stability of my system.
    --
    gentoo-user@gentoo.org <mailto:gentoo-user@gentoo.org> mailing list




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- Mark Shields



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