Thanks for the tip. It's a very very fresh port list, i made make dports-create-shallow at 3PM, today :)
-- Best regards, Loïc BLOT, UNIX systems, security and network expert http://www.unix-experience.fr Le lundi 20 mai 2013 à 16:53 +0200, John Marino a écrit : > On 5/20/2013 16:47, Loïc BLOT wrote: > > I agree with you, this works on FreeBSD, but in DragonFly it seems this > > don't work, i don't know why, it seems this is the same file... > > Maybe this is a stupid question, but is your dports repository fully up > to date? > > "git log -1" from /usr/dports should return something like "Remove > games/unknown-horizons: depends on removed fife" if it is. > > The reason this is important is that the "USES+=" notation from FreeBSD > is brand new. Older versions of makefiles would break. > > > > Another problem is also when we want to search a port. On FreeBSD we can > > do it with whereis <portname> or going to /usr/ports and do a make > > search name=<portname>. > > In DragonFly the whereis doens't work, why not, but make search failed > > because of missing files (look at the attachment). Then how can i do a > > make search ? > > It doesn't work because DragonFly doesn't produce an index. We probably > could if I move our version of portsnap into dports but as of now we > haven't seen a need (I think FreeBSD even wants to eliminate the INDEX > because it's so fragile but I need confirmation on that.). > > I'd just use "find", e.g. "find /usr/dports -type d -name <PORTNAME>" > That's pretty quick. > > John
signature.asc
Description: This is a digitally signed message part
