This has already been answered as emerge -e world, but I have some more info for you. At any time if the emerge dies [or you control-c it] you can pick up where you left off with emerge --resume. The --resume can also be treated like a normal emerge in the sense that you can emerge --resume -p to see what you have left.
This past week I've been rebuilding my system from GCC 2.95.3 to GCC 3.2.2. And I've already killed it and resumed it a number of times so I could play video games :) Good luck, Mike On Sat, 14 Jun 2003, Tom Allison wrote: > Date: Sat, 14 Jun 2003 09:06:23 -0400 > From: Tom Allison <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: [gentoo-user] rebuilding everything > > I am slowing making some progress and am looking at some of the security > options. > > I didn't put them in USE before and need to do some rebuilding. > > How do you tell emerge to update everything and to rebuild everything > regardless of it's update status? > > > > -- > [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list > -><- "And don't tell me there isn't one bit of difference between null and space, because that's exactly how much difference there is. :-)" --Larry Wall in <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> SDF Public Access UNIX System - http://sdf.lonestar.org -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
