M. Warner Losh wrote: > In message: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > "[LoN]Kamikaze" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > : [LoN]Kamikaze wrote: > : > M. Warner Losh wrote: > : >> Greetings, > : >> > : >> is there an easy way to get a list of all the ports that compile > : >> kernel modules? I'd like to add them to my kernel build. I did this > : >> once before, but I lost all information on how to do it when I lost my > : >> laptop's hard disk after the last bsdcan... > : >> > : >> Warner > : > > : > # find /boot/ -type f -exec pkg_info -W \{} \; > : > : Sorry about that, it takes very long. Better is: > : > : # sh -c 'for mod in `pkg_info -qaL|grep -E "^/+boot"`; { pkg_info -W > "$mod"; } > > This sounds great, except for one problem. This will tell me all the > modules that I've installed that are from ports. Since I've never > installed any from ports, this will not work for what I want. I want > a list of all the ports in /usr/ports that install kernel modules. > I'd even settle for a list of all the ports in /usr/ports that only > install modules. > > Something like > egrep -l '\.ko$' /usr/ports/*/*/pkg-plist | sed -e s=/pkg-plist// > might do the trick, but that blows the command line limits out of the > water. Replacing egrep with 'find' would need to be carefully > constructed to avoid false positives in any work directories I have > laying around. I was hoping for something a little easier to do... > > Warner
I see I misunderstood, sorry about that. So how about that one: # find /usr/ports/ -type f -name pkg-plist -exec grep -El '[EMAIL PROTECTED]:space:]]+/boot' \{} \; | sed -E 's|^/usr/ports/||1' | sed -E 's|/pkg-plist$||1' It only works with ports that have a pkg-plist file, though. _______________________________________________ freebsd-ports@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-ports To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"