Well, the aim was to keep things simple and just use the packages, but
along the road, discipline failed and I stared to use the ports for
whatever reason. I suppose that being your own System Administrator is
something that has to be learned too.
Does this make it useless to report 'bugs' I find on my system, until I do
a complete reinstall, as now there is a large possibility the causes are
some local problems with my installation.
I'm asking because some apps seem to have problems when using the
Rik-theme, and be OK with the traditional GNUstep theme, but I think I
just dowloaded the source for the Rik-theme and just installed it. (I
understand now this must be even more horrible to a real FreeBSD-user than
mixing ports and packages)
*With Rik,* Terminal.app for instance, displays the menu on top, but opens
no window, with the following displays:
[edwin@ottopedi ~]$ openapp Terminal
2017-11-08 04:14:46.391 Terminal[1388:100275] styleoffsets ... guessing
offsets
2017-11-08 04:14:46.392 Terminal[1388:100275] styleoffsets ... guessing
offsets
2017-11-08 04:14:47.841 Terminal[1388:100275] File NSView.m: 1183. In
-[NSView setFrame:] given negative width
2017-11-08 04:14:47.842 Terminal[1388:100275] File NSView.m: 1188. In
-[NSView setFrame:] given negative height
2017-11-08 04:14:47.843 Terminal[1388:100275] NSFont <NSFont: 0x2c79ea00>
DejaVu Sans Mono 12.000 0.000 0.000 12.000 0.000 0.000 S 0 info
<CairoFontInfo: 0x2c776990> size 12 {x = 0; y = -9; width = 8; height = 9} 1
2017-11-08 04:14:47.981 Terminal[1388:100275] Problem posting notification:
<NSException: 0x2c7c5d10> NAME:NSInvalidArgumentException
REASON:[Rik-fillRect:withTiles:background:fillStyle:] rect width is not
positive INFO:(null )
When closing with the Quit option from the menu, I get a segmentation
fault.
*With the GNUstep theme,* Terminal.app opens normally, and the displays
after the start are:
[edwin@ottopedi ~]$ openapp Terminal
2017-11-08 04:22:02.797 Terminal[1539:100276] styleoffsets ... guessing
offsets
2017-11-08 04:22:02.798 Terminal[1539:100276] styleoffsets ... guessing
offsets
2017-11-08 04:22:03.489 Terminal[1539:100276] File NSView.m: 1183. In
-[NSView setFrame:] given negative width
2017-11-08 04:22:03.490 Terminal[1539:100276] File NSView.m: 1188. In
-[NSView setFrame:] given negative height
2017-11-08 04:22:03.491 Terminal[1539:100276] NSFont <NSFont: 0x2c542cb0>
DejaVu Sans Mono 12.000 0.000 0.000 12.000 0.000 0.000 S 0 info
<CairoFontInfo: 0x2c3f75d0> size 12 {x = 0; y = -9; width = 8; height = 9} 1
Thanks,
Edwin.
2017-11-07 12:06 GMT+01:00 David Chisnall <[email protected]>:
> On 4 Nov 2017, at 17:07, Edwin Ancaer <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > I installed the ports with the make install command, in a previous
> version.
> >
> >
> > The update was done with the freebsd-update command. Then the problems
> started.
> >
> > I also reinstalled all ports with the portmaster utility. It took my
> laptop over 24 hours to compile and install everything, but to no avail.
>
> It’s worth noting that, while this may work, it is *strongly* discouraged
> on modern FreeBSD. Ideally, you should be able to simply use the packaged
> versions (pkg ins gnustep-app). If you do need to compile from source
> (e.g. if you need some custom options) then the recommended way to do so is
> to install Poudriere and use it to build a package set.
>
> David
>
>
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