Beso <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> posted [EMAIL PROTECTED], excerpted below, on Sun, 23 Nov 2008 11:56:36 +0000:
> with portage i had very often issues with having the deps discovered > in the right way. of course when the system is up and running this > isn't so much of a trouble, but when you set it up or when > you do an upgrade that still has quite some deps discovered then the > problem is to be seen. Hmm... I've never had a major problem in that regard. At least not since my initial from-stage-one installation back with 2004.0 (first try) and .1 (actual success). But portage is so changed since then it's really not worth considering, and it could have just as easily been my goofs, I know I was learning a quite a bit as I went, or bad ebuilds. Other than that, there has been perhaps an occasional minor niggle, but nothing someone running ~arch shouldn't expect from time to time and be able to work out or revert to a working version (perhaps the known working version on the rootbak image, snapshot taken when the system was in known bootable and reasonably stable condition) should it be necessary. Personally, however, I suspect that stable isn't really that much more stable than ~arch, and the fact that my portage stub-scripts for @world and @system all use -aNuDv so I get a preview, deep dependencies don't get behind and USE flag changes get managed right away, plus routine use of revdep-rebuild and --depclean, possibly none of which those on stable are likely to do regularly let alone religiously, has a lot to do with my relatively smooth ride, even on ~arch. > well, anyway, i always find good having > at least 2 working package installers I saw that point made a few days ago and thought it was a good one. Of course, if I were to do it given my stated position, I'd be merging pkgcore instead. However, I've a decent enough familiarity with portage that in some cases at least, it's easier to actually work the problem, than it would be to learn my way around a second PM. -- Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs. "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master -- and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman
