On 2009-12-23, at 02:12 , Ryan Schmidt wrote:
On Dec 22, 2009, at 11:07, Peter Hindrichs wrote:
I have a program that I am not using anymore and would like to uninstall it
and all its dependencies.
Would I use something like sudo port uninstall fish +dependecies
As was mentioned
, 2009 at 5:56 AM, Peter Hindrichs p...@ispnet.ca wrote:
On 2009-12-23, at 02:12 , Ryan Schmidt wrote:
On Dec 22, 2009, at 11:07, Peter Hindrichs wrote:
I have a program that I am not using anymore and would like to uninstall
it and all its dependencies.
Would I use something like
I was trying to install GNUMail-Aqua and ran into this issue, and am not sure
how to proceed.
Freedom:~ peterhin$ sudo port install GNUMail-Aqua
Password:
--- Computing dependencies for GNUMail-Aqua
--- Fetching GNUMail-Aqua
--- Attempting to fetch GNUMail-1.2.0pre1.tar.gz from
On 2009-12-23, at 16:55 , Ryan Schmidt wrote:
On Dec 23, 2009, at 10:04, Peter Hindrichs wrote:
I was trying to install GNUMail-Aqua and ran into this issue, and am not
sure how to proceed.
Freedom:~ peterhin$ sudo port install GNUMail-Aqua
Password:
--- Computing dependencies
Good Day,
I have a program that I am not using anymore and would like to uninstall it and
all its dependencies.
Would I use something like sudo port uninstall fish +dependecies
Thanks
Peter
___
macports-users mailing list
I uninstalled the port that I wasn't using anymore, which took awhile as I had
to uninstall all the dependencies that went with it, manually.
My question earlier should have been with installing a port, it is quite easy
sudo port install whatever and it will do all the heavy lifting.
Is
Yes I thought that they would be one in the same. Further explanation would be
greatly appreciated.
On 2009-12-22, at 21:17 , Randal L. Schwartz wrote:
Joshua == Joshua Root j...@macports.org writes:
Joshua He said dependencies, not dependents. Probably want port_cutleaves.
OK, can you
On 2009-12-22, at 21:32 , nox wrote:
A dependent of X is a port Y which depends on X.
A dependency of X is a port Y which X depends on.
So if port Y depends on say A, B, C, what would be the correct way to uninstall
Y and its dependencies.
Le 23 déc. 2009 à 03:20, Peter Hindrichs a écrit
On 2009-12-22, at 21:40 , Randal L. Schwartz wrote:
Peter == Peter Hindrichs p...@ispnet.ca writes:
Peter On 2009-12-22, at 21:32 , nox wrote:
A dependent of X is a port Y which depends on X.
A dependency of X is a port Y which X depends on.
Peter So if port Y depends on say A, B, C
On 2009-10-10, at 24:10 , Joshua Root wrote:
On 2009-10-10 00:44, Peter Hindrichs wrote:
If I read correctly what Joshua Root wrote, then I am out of luck
till a
64-bit update is built.
Sorry, I guess I didn't make myself very clear. The port builds and
works fine now AFAICT, it just
On 2009-10-08, at 23:02 , Ryan Schmidt wrote:
On Oct 8, 2009, at 22:01, Peter Hindrichs wrote:
I did find this note in the Xcode Release notes:
Note: GCC 4.2 cannot be used with the Mac OS X 10.4u SDK. If you
want to build targets using the 10.4u SDK on Xcode 3.2, you must
set
On 2009-10-08, at 23:02 , Ryan Schmidt wrote:
On Oct 8, 2009, at 22:01, Peter Hindrichs wrote:
I did find this note in the Xcode Release notes:
Note: GCC 4.2 cannot be used with the Mac OS X 10.4u SDK. If you
want to build targets using the 10.4u SDK on Xcode 3.2, you must
set
On 2009-10-08, at 23:02 , Ryan Schmidt wrote:
On Oct 8, 2009, at 22:01, Peter Hindrichs wrote:
I did find this note in the Xcode Release notes:
Note: GCC 4.2 cannot be used with the Mac OS X 10.4u SDK. If you
want to build targets using the 10.4u SDK on Xcode 3.2, you must
set
On 2009-10-09, at 17:00 , Brandon Allbery wrote:
On Oct 9, 2009, at 09:44 , Peter Hindrichs wrote:
I still have the question how would I get to the portfile via the
command line, this is still puzzling.
mress:23478 Z$ port file CosmicDebris
/opt/local/var/macports/sources
I am looking to further my understanding and knowledge of the command
line and Ports so when I tried to install the port CosmicDebris I
got this message.
I have tried to figure it out, but am having no luck, could someone
please help me to understand what is actually being said here.
On 2009-10-08, at 19:37 , Lenore Horner wrote:
On Oct 8, 2009, at 18:24 , Peter Hindrichs wrote:
I am looking to further my understanding and knowledge of the
command line and Ports so when I tried to install the port
CosmicDebris I got this message.
I have tried to figure it out
On 2009-10-08, at 22:00 , Ryan Schmidt wrote:
On Oct 8, 2009, at 18:52, Peter Hindrichs wrote:
On 2009-10-08, at 19:37 , Lenore Horner wrote:
I have 10.5 installed on my Mac. I have both /Developer/SDKs/
MacOSX10.4u.sdk and /Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.5.sdk. I have vague
memories
On 2009-10-08, at 22:52 , Ryan Schmidt wrote:
On Oct 8, 2009, at 21:50, Peter Hindrichs wrote:
OK I found 10.4u SDK and installed it. This is what I get now when
I try to do the install:
Freedom:~ peterhin$ sudo port install CosmicDebris
Password:
--- Computing dependencies
On 2009-09-29, at 23:09 , Ryan Schmidt wrote:
On Sep 29, 2009, at 21:43, Peter Hindrichs wrote:
So now how do I safely remove the extraneous parts of this PATH ?
After you've removed the duplicate line from your .profile, close
the Terminal window and make a new one. The extraneous
On 2009-09-30, at 05:35 , Ryan Schmidt wrote:
On Sep 30, 2009, at 04:32, Peter Hindrichs wrote:
On 2009-09-29, at 23:09 , Ryan Schmidt wrote:
On Sep 29, 2009, at 21:43, Peter Hindrichs wrote:
So now how do I safely remove the extraneous parts of this PATH ?
After you've removed
On 2009-09-30, at 05:35 , Ryan Schmidt wrote:
On Sep 30, 2009, at 04:32, Peter Hindrichs wrote:
On 2009-09-29, at 23:09 , Ryan Schmidt wrote:
On Sep 29, 2009, at 21:43, Peter Hindrichs wrote:
So now how do I safely remove the extraneous parts of this PATH ?
After you've removed
On 2009-09-30, at 06:07 , Ryan Schmidt wrote:
On Sep 30, 2009, at 05:00, Peter Hindrichs wrote:
I have done this, and here is what I get:
Freedom:~ peterhin$ env
TERM_PROGRAM=Apple_Terminal
TERM=xterm-color
SHELL=/bin/bash
TMPDIR=/var/folders/Sd/SdnvDsNAHdqx7M41XmVmbTI/-Tmp
I hope this is appropriate for this forum, if not just advise and I
will not continue.
I have wanted to set up my history to only show a one time occurrence
of each command that I use.
I found this on the web: http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-13727_7-10361343-263.html?tag=mncol;title
I
On 2009-09-30, at 21:21 , Ryan Schmidt wrote:
On Sep 30, 2009, at 19:43, Peter Hindrichs wrote:
I have wanted to set up my history to only show a one time
occurrence of each command that I use.
I found this on the web: http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-13727_7-10361343-263.html?tag=mncol
On 2009-09-30, at 22:23 , Ryan Schmidt wrote:
On Sep 30, 2009, at 20:51, Peter Hindrichs wrote:
On 2009-09-30, at 21:21 , Ryan Schmidt wrote:
Sounds like the MacPorts installer set up your PATH in
your .profile. Bash will read startup instructions from
either .bash_profile or .profile
On 2009-09-29, at 21:13 , Ryan Schmidt wrote:
On Sep 29, 2009, at 19:49, Peter Hindrichs wrote:
On 2009-09-29, at 20:31 , Ryan Schmidt wrote:
Bash might look in one of several files for its initialization
instructions. These files are
called .profile, .bash_profile, .bashrc, .login
On 2009-09-29, at 20:31 , Ryan Schmidt wrote:
On Sep 29, 2009, at 19:09, Peter Hindrichs wrote:
On 2009-09-29, at 19:59 , Ryan Schmidt wrote:
On Sep 29, 2009, at 18:54, Peter Hindrichs wrote:
Just doing some re reading of your website and was wondering if
this path is acceptable
Good Day,
I just switched to Snow Leopard and am having problems with port
This is what I get if I try to do any actions with port:
Freedom:~ peterhin$ port selfupdate
dlopen(/Library/Tcl/macports1.0/MacPorts.dylib, 10): no suitable image
found. Did find:
Good Day,
I have been using mtr to check the network signal from my wireless
ISP, and it has been working fine until the other day when I updated
my system to 10.5.3
I did an uninstall of mtr and reinstalled it, with no change here is
what I get when I try mtr ispnet.ca
Freedom:~
Reading the last couple of posts regarding bash version, I was
wondering if I have the correct version for my system. I have a Mac
Pro Intel processor, this is what I get:
Freedom:~ peterhin$ $BASH_VERSION
-bash: 3.2.17(1)-release: command not found
Freedom:~ peterhin$ bash --version
GNU
Thanks for the info, and I shall use the reply all from now on, sorry
about that.
Peter
On 24-Feb-08, at 8:24 PM, Rainer Müller wrote:
Peter Hindrichs wrote:
Ok thanks for that, I am all for the safer and easier solution.
However for my edification I would like to understand what I am
I have followed all the recommendations in getting ready to use ports.
I have Xtools 3.0, X11, (with the latest version 2.1.3) and downloaded
Macports 1.6.0. I have also read that there is an issue with 1.6.0 in
setting up the .profile, my question is that I don't know where to go
from
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