Hi,
When I tried to install mariadb-10.1 I get following error, is it removed? It
work previously.
---> Fetching archive for mariadb-10.1
---> Attempting to fetch mariadb-10.1-10.1.24_0+openssl.darwin_16.x86_64.tbz2
from
On Aug 31, 2017, at 10:53, Ken Cunningham wrote:
> I think homebrew gets attention for two reasons.
>
>
> 1. a one-line copy & paste install command that is pasted into the terminal
> (macports could / should do that too, BTW).
While I agree our web site, including installation
On Aug 31, 2017, at 3:34 PM, Craig Treleaven wrote:
> AIUI, casks are supposed to help in two ways: binary (only) packages and
> pre-compiled binaries.
>
> MacPorts solved the second part several years ago. As an aside, I think a
> lot of people using Homebrew never
> On Aug 31, 2017, at 9:46 AM, db wrote:
>
> On 31 Aug 2017, at 15:35, Craig Treleaven wrote:
>> What is it that you want that MacPorts does not provide?
>
> As I said in my OP, missing ports and updated versions, cask...
Gentle reminders, regularily
On 31 Aug 2017, at 17:53, Ken Cunningham
wrote:
> I think homebrew gets attention for two reasons.
>
>
> 1. a one-line copy & paste install command that is pasted into the terminal
> (macports could / should do that too, BTW).
>
> 2. the fact that it
I think homebrew gets attention for two reasons.
1. a one-line copy & paste install command that is pasted into the terminal
(macports could / should do that too, BTW).
2. the fact that it symlinks it's stuff into /usr/local, making it easier to
use it's installed products for building other
On 31 Aug 2017, at 15:35, Craig Treleaven wrote:
> What is it that you want that MacPorts does not provide?
As I said in my OP, missing ports and updated versions, cask...
> On Aug 31, 2017, at 9:32 AM, db wrote:
>
> On 30 Aug 2017, at 10:16, Richard L. Hamilton wrote:
>> the newer, safer convention is distinct subdirectories of /opt, for each
>> package or set of commonly managed packages; thus, MacPorts by default uses
>>
On 30 Aug 2017, at 10:16, Richard L. Hamilton wrote:
> the newer, safer convention is distinct subdirectories of /opt, for each
> package or set of commonly managed packages; thus, MacPorts by default uses
> /opt/local, XQuartz uses /opt/X11 (for the stuff that's not