> On 9 Dec 2015, at 2:15 a.m., Eric Haszlakiewicz <[email protected]> wrote: > >> On December 8, 2015 10:15:41 AM EST, Andy Ruhl <[email protected]> wrote: >> On Tue, Dec 8, 2015 at 5:32 AM, [email protected] >> <[email protected]> wrote: >>> Apologies for what may be a n00b question... >>> >>> I familiar with using pkgsrc to build the latest and greatest OpenSSH >> and >>> then installing it, but this obviously doesn't overwrite the existing >> SSH >>> package that comes with the build. >>> >>> How can I remove the default package and instruct the system to use >> the one >>> I've built from pkgsrc? >> >> NetBSD, and the other BSDs (that I'm aware of) don't use a package >> manager for the base software. So you aren't removing the base ssh >> software (which is openssh), you're just not starting it at boot time. > > Which is a great way to run into problems. Even if you need to manually do > so, if you're using ssh from pkgsrc I highly suggest removing the base ssh > binaries. > I ran into issues like this before (with pkg_add, etc...) and it can lead to > unexpected behavior when you inevitably end up running the wrong binary. > > Eric
How would you do that? Just manually deleting them? -Mark
