On Jan 3, 2011, at 11:44, David Epstein wrote: > I just installed Leopard (was on Tiger). > Then I did > sudo port selfupdate > which succeeded.
When you change major versions of Mac OS X, you'll need to manually install the latest Xcode from Apple, and also uninstall and reinstall all ports. Please see: http://trac.macports.org/wiki/Migration > I also did some cleaning up, in the course of which I lost gfmt that I use > all the time. > > Q1. The puzzle for me is: how do I find out which port in Macports contains > gfmt? There isn't a MacPorts command to do that, unless you already have the port installed. Since I do, I can tell you: $ port provides $(which gfmt) /opt/local/bin/gfmt is provided by: coreutils > Q2. Which system files am I supposed to edit at this point? For example 'man > port' no longer finds 'port', so I suppose the search path for man is not > including /opt/local/man /opt/local/share/man is actually the path you want to use. The relevant variable is MANPATH which can be set in ~/.profile, ~/.bash_profile, ~/.bashrc or similar bash startup file. Note that you probably *don't* want to set MANPATH; you probably want to just set PATH and let the system create MANPATH dynamically based on PATH. > Q3. Is there an info file for port? I can't find any. I suppose not. There's a manpage, an online manual (the guide), and the wiki pages. _______________________________________________ macports-users mailing list [email protected] http://lists.macosforge.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/macports-users
