Kris Kennaway writes:
> > I committed a crime! While upgrading the ports under the newly
> > installed RELENG_7 (beta4) with "portupgrade -arRk" I **deleted**
> > the directory /var/db/pkg.
> >
> > Is there any way to rebuild it from scratch?
>
> Nope, that was the only copy.
A
vittorio wrote:
I committed a crime! While upgrading the ports under the newly installed
RELENG_7 (beta4) with "portupgrade -arRk" I **deleted ** the
directory /var/db/pkg.
Is there any way to rebuild it from scratch?
Ciao
Vittorio
Nope, that was the only copy.
Kris
__
I committed a crime! While upgrading the ports under the newly installed
RELENG_7 (beta4) with "portupgrade -arRk" I **deleted ** the
directory /var/db/pkg.
Is there any way to rebuild it from scratch?
Ciao
Vittorio
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Robertsen A. Riehle writes:
> Fetching
>
> ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/ports/i386/packages-5-stable/Latest/gcc41.tbz...
> /var: write failed, filesystem is full
> info/gcc41/gccint.info: Write error: No space left on device
> Done.
> ^C
> /var: write failed, filesystem is full
>
On Thursday 25 May 2006 19:03, John Nielsen wrote:
> Quoting Robert Huff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> > Robertsen A. Riehle writes:
> >> Say that the /var/db/pkg directory had been recursively erased
> >> off of a workstation that had ~300 packages on it. And, let's
> >> hypothetically say that this
Quoting Robert Huff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
Robertsen A. Riehle writes:
Say that the /var/db/pkg directory had been recursively erased
off of a workstation that had ~300 packages on it. And, let's
hypothetically say that this workstation's ports tree was up to
date as of yesterday. Is ther
Robertsen A. Riehle writes:
> Say that the /var/db/pkg directory had been recursively erased
> off of a workstation that had ~300 packages on it. And, let's
> hypothetically say that this workstation's ports tree was up to
> date as of yesterday. Is there any hope of rectifying this or is
>
On Thu, May 25, 2006 at 05:55:55PM -0500, Robertsen A. Riehle wrote:
> Say that the /var/db/pkg directory had been recursively erased off of a
> workstation that had ~300 packages on it. And, let's hypothetically say
> that this workstation's ports tree was up to date as of yesterday. Is there
Say that the /var/db/pkg directory had been recursively erased off of a
workstation that had ~300 packages on it. And, let's hypothetically say
that this workstation's ports tree was up to date as of yesterday. Is there
any hope of rectifying this or is this workstation is a static ports stat