> Jim,
>
> You mentioned that you didn't have a refuse file.
>
> You might want to double check that
> /usr/local/etc/cvsup/sup/refuse or
>
[other_default_base_specified_by_your_ports_supfile]/sup/refuse
> does
> indeed not exist.
>
> find / -name refuse -print#also a handy way,
> providing
On Mon, 21 Jun 2004 13:14:44 -0600
Kendall Gifford <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Bill Sawyer wrote:
>
> > Jim,
> >
> > I had the same problem. I think it was a tk port, if I recall
> > correctly.
> >
> > The only way I could fix it was to rm -drv /usr/ports & rm my refuse
> > file, then cvsup a
Bill Sawyer wrote:
Jim,
I had the same problem. I think it was a tk port, if I recall correctly.
The only way I could fix it was to rm -drv /usr/ports & rm my refuse file, then cvsup
again. After that, portsdb -Uu ran properly (though it took forever).
I had the same problem recently since I wa
Jim,
I had the same problem. I think it was a tk port, if I recall correctly.
The only way I could fix it was to rm -drv /usr/ports & rm my refuse file, then cvsup
again. After that, portsdb -Uu ran properly (though it took forever).
Bill Sawyer
Information Systems
Six Flags St. Louis
(636) 9
I'm missing a few ports collections such as Japanese
and Russian. Now when I try to run portsdb -Uu after
CVSUPing the ports collection I get an error of a
missing japanese port. The strange thing is that my
cvsupfile is set to fetch "ports-all." Why is it not
pulling in the missing ports? I don't