> On 19 Oct 2014, at 7:33 pm, Carlo Tambuatco <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Supported or not...this way seemed to work for a majority of my ports and I 
> was wondering whether nuking all 459 of my ports for the sake of a few that 
> don't work seems like an inefficient solution. It seems there are other ways 
> to approach this problem...

If you want to go against the advice of the experts (not me btw) and not follow 
the migration guide that is your choice. The guide says what it does for good 
reasons, not just for the fun of reinstalling... 

> 
>> On Sun, Oct 19, 2014 at 2:30 PM, Chris Jones <[email protected]> 
>> wrote:
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> > On 19 Oct 2014, at 7:26 pm, Lawrence Velázquez <[email protected]> wrote:
>> >
>> >> On Oct 19, 2014, at 12:57 PM, Chris Jones <[email protected]> 
>> >> wrote:
>> >>
>> >> I still think something went wrong and some memory of your previous OSX 
>> >> 10.9 installations is still present. I cannot see how you would get 
>> >> messages regarding Darwin 13 otherwise.
>> >
>> > It seems that Carlo successfully upgraded all his other ports, and the 
>> > ones he listed are the ones that failed for one reason or another. Since 
>> > they are left over from Mavericks, base considers them outdated.
>> 
>> My understanding though is this is not a supported way of upgrading after an 
>> OS upgrade. Removing all ports first then reinstalling those you want is the 
>> recommendation.
>> 
>> >
>> > vq
> 
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