On Tue, Nov 11, 2003 at 06:24:31PM -0600, Chris wrote: > On Tuesday 11 November 2003 01:39 pm, Bjarne Wichmann Petersen wrote: > > On Tuesday 11 November 2003 18:33, William O'Higgins wrote: > > > Quite foolishly, I ran this command without thinking it through: > > > > > > portupgrade -arR > > > > Try the -n switch (ie. portupgrade -narR), this will show which ports will > > be upgraded without doing so. > > > > The great thing about this, is once you have done this for the 1st time (as > you have) and if you continue to update your ports tree (perhaps on a nightly > basis) you can run portupgrade daily, and the time needed is sooo much > shorter. > > On a personal note - I do update my ports nightly, then run portgrade -arR > daily. I don't think it runs more then 10 mins on any day. > > Welcome to the world of maintaining your ports!
Do you happen to run apache and php4? I had trouble with these two. One didn't need to be updated and the other did. The result was that apache didn't wan't to load php4. I had to fore the compilation of the other port. -- Alex _______________________________________________ [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"