On Oct 27, 2005, at 8:32 PM, John DeStefano wrote:

On 10/27/05, Andrew P. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

On 10/27/05, John DeStefano <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:


After clearing out the ports, updating ports (with portsnap) and
source, and rebuilding the system and kernel... it seemed the ultimate problem was actually a dependency of the package to apache1.3. After I ran 'pkgdb -F' and "fixed" this dependency to point to apache2.1, but
I still had trouble installing ports.


At this point, what usually works for me is to:

#cd /usr && rm -rf ./ports

#mkdir ./ports && cvsup /root/ports-supfile

The above will delete your ENTIRE ports tree, provided it's kept in / usr/ports and as long as you use cvsup (and your ports supfile is / root/ports-supfile as mine is). When a whole bunch of ports stop working, I find this is the easiest thing to do.

The other thing I do is run a cron job every week that updates, via cvsup, the ports tree. About once a year I perform the above, mostly to clean out the crap. Re-downloading your entire ports tree will be quicker if you don't use the ports-all tag and actually define which port segments you are interested in. For example, there's no real reason to download all the x11/kde/gnome crap if you're doing this on a headless server that isn't going to serve X.

HTH
_______________________________________________________
Eric F Crist                  "I am so smart, S.M.R.T!"
Secure Computing Networks              -Homer J Simpson

_______________________________________________
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions
To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"

Reply via email to