On Saturday 02 of October 2010 13:27:00 Thomas Mueller wrote: > How can one do a massive portupgrade, as with -r or -R, without being > interrupted by options configuration screens for many individual ports? > Idea is to let it run unattended such as when I might run it starting just > before bedtime. Doing "make config" ahead of time also gives the chance > to recover from a typo at the configuration screen (high risk). > > Best thing I can think of is, using multimedia/ffmpeg as an example, is > doing a dry run > > portupgrade -Rn multimedia/ffmpeg |& tee -a wouldbe.log > > This would show what other packages would need to be portupgraded and avoid > reconfiguring up-to-date dependencies. Then I would go to each of those > directories in the ports tree and run "make config". > > Running "make config-recursive" in /usr/ports/multimedia/ffmpeg would > produce configuration screens for all dependencies, including those that > are up-to-date. > > I tried > > portupgrade -RCn multimedia/ffmpeg |& tee -a wouldbe.log > > but then I got all dependency configuration screens, including those that > were up-to-date, and also the interface didn't work right: I got garbage > when trying to respond; it didn't write to the configuration screen but > produced non-color garbage to the background. > > Running "make config-recursive" in /usr/ports/multimedia/ffmpeg would > configure all dependencies, including those that are up-to-date and > therefore not in need of portupgrading, though "make config-recursive" > seems appropriate for a first build/install of a port. > > But I think there is no perfect way to be sure of doing all "make config"s > in advance, since selectable options could require additional > dependencies. > > If you try to portupgrade perl to 5.12 and everything that depends on it, > as advised in UPDATING file, date 20100715, you will likely get a lot of > configuration dialog screens: I speak from experience, would surely like a > way to do all these "make config"s at the beginning. > > Tom > _______________________________________________ > [email protected] mailing list > http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions > To unsubscribe, send any mail to > "[email protected]"
If you are sure that the default configuration settings are OK for you, then one way is to perform a portupgrade with the switches --batch --yes, like portupgrade --batch --yes -a This will assume that the default settings are those you like and will not ask you anything about configuration screens e.t.c. Elias _______________________________________________ [email protected] mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[email protected]"
