Mel Flynn writes:
-PP will fail if for some reason the package is not available on the
servers.
It is better to use -P when crossing major releases, so that any restricted
packages that are unavailable on the buildservers are built from source.
I suspect this is the root of the
Manolis Kiagias writes:
Upgrading between major versions requires all installed ports to be
rebuilt, so they get linked to the new versions of the libraries.
I suppose you missed this step, older apps may still work but there is a
problem installing new ones.
[...]
(AFAIR, if you
Quoting Manolis Kiagias son...@otenet.gr:
Upgrading between major versions requires all installed ports to be
rebuilt, so they get linked to the new versions of the libraries.
I suppose you missed this step, older apps may still work but there is a
problem installing new ones.
Please see the
Hi,
I've upgraded my laptop from 6.4 to 7.2-RELEASE. Essentially
everything went fine, except that for some reason xfburn no longer
works. If I install a package using portupgrade -f -PP, I see the
following at runtime:
mar...@yeti:/usr/home/markus# xfburn
[1] 47214
Markus Hoenicka wrote:
Hi,
I've upgraded my laptop from 6.4 to 7.2-RELEASE. Essentially
everything went fine, except that for some reason xfburn no longer
works. If I install a package using portupgrade -f -PP, I see the
following at runtime:
mar...@yeti:/usr/home/markus# xfburn
[1]
On Thursday 25 June 2009 14:55:37 Markus Hoenicka wrote:
I've upgraded my laptop from 6.4 to 7.2-RELEASE. Essentially
everything went fine, except that for some reason xfburn no longer
works. If I install a package using portupgrade -f -PP
-PP will fail if for some reason the package is not