* Rakhesh Sasidharan [2006-06-10]:
http://www.openbsd.org/pkg-stable.html
I assume that that list is not limited to just binary packages? Even
those available *only* in the ports are included?
That list is limited to binary package updates.
Nikolay
My apologies if this has been asked earlier and I missed out in the
archives/ FAQ.
I am using OpenBSD 3.9 -release with the -release branch of the ports
tree (ports.tar.gz downloaded from the 3.9 FTP directory). I undestand
that if I do cd /usr/ports cvs -q up -dP -rOPENBSD_3_9 it would
bring
On Fri, Jun 09, 2006 at 10:07:17AM +0400, Rakhesh Sasidharan wrote:
My apologies if this has been asked earlier and I missed out in the
archives/ FAQ.
I am using OpenBSD 3.9 -release with the -release branch of the ports
tree (ports.tar.gz downloaded from the 3.9 FTP directory). I undestand
Start with pkg_add -u, and go from there. OpenBSD mostly uses packages.
There is also a ports(7) command to do this, but it escapes me at the
moment.
Yup. My question was for those packages that dont have a package
equivalent and needs updating thru ports. :)
Thanks,
Rakhesh
--
Hi Rakhesh,
There is also a ports(7) command to do this, but it escapes me at the
moment.
Yup. My question was for those packages that dont have a package
equivalent and needs updating thru ports. :)
/usr/ports/infrastructure/build/out-of-date, perhaps?
HTH... Nico
http://www.openbsd.org/pkg-stable.html
I assume that that list is not limited to just binary packages? Even
those available *only* in the ports are included?
http://www.openbsd.org/pkg-stable.html
I assume that that list is not limited to just binary packages? Even
those available *only* in the ports are included?
Since a package is built from a port then by looking at that list you
can find out what ports have been updated.
Except that some
On Sat, Jun 10, 2006 at 04:35:16AM +0400, Rakhesh Sasidharan wrote:
http://www.openbsd.org/pkg-stable.html
I assume that that list is not limited to just binary packages? Even
those available *only* in the ports are included?
Since a package is built from a port then by looking at that