On Wed, 07 Apr 2010 20:21:57 -0400, Lowell Gilbert <freebsd-questions-lo...@be-well.ilk.org> wrote: > Fbsd1 <fb...@a1poweruser.com> writes: > > Your wrong. I installed the package of postfix and it installed it > > self into /usr/bin with out any help from me. > > Believe it or not, I checked before responding, so I'm *not* wrong. I > said that the port populates into /usr/local like it should, and having > it on several machines for nearly a decade now, I knew that to be the > case. You then changed that to refer to a package rather than a port; I > don't know where you got your packages from, but I checked the packages > for 8-STABLE and for 8.0-RELEASE, and saw that they install into > /usr/local as well. So it sounds like your packages didn't come from > the FreeBSD project, if they are really installing anything into > /usr/bin. > > Just as a sanity check: what, specifically, is installed into /usr/bin > on your system? Most of the postfix executables go into sbin rather > than bin anyway, so it's possible that something in the mailwrapper > system is confusing you. If you don't have a /usr/local/sbin/postfix, > but have a /usr/sbin/postfix instead, then this is not the case.
A comfortable, maybe overcomplicated way to check what a package will install - without actually installing it - is to use the option -n for pkg_add (which obviously operates on packages, not on ports). So you could do: pkg_add -fKnrv postfix > /tmp/postfix_add.txt This even works if postfix is already installed. The options, for a short reference, are: -f = force, -K = keep, -n = no install, -r = remote and -v = verbose. You can then search for lines that address specific locations in /usr/bin rather than /usr/local/bin. -- Polytropon Magdeburg, Germany Happy FreeBSD user since 4.0 Andra moi ennepe, Mousa, ... _______________________________________________ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"