On Apr 10, 2015, at 12:44 PM, René J.V. Bertin wrote:

> The issue around the root backdoor has me re-evaluating how much longer I'm 
> going to postpone upgrading. One thing that's certainly not helping is the 
> time I know I'll spend rebuilding all of my ports if I do things the official 
> way.
> 
> To what extent is it possible to avoid (= prepare) this? We get the 10.10 SDK 
> anyway, so shouldn't it be possible to build against that, setting the min. 
> OS X compatibility version to 10.9?

If you use default prefix, and use default variants for most ports, you'll get 
binaries for many of them, so if your internet connection is reasonably fast, 
it shouldn't take long to reinstall most ports. There may be some exceptions 
which would take time to build of course. But migration is also an opportunity 
for you to take stock of the ports you've installed any maybe cull some you 
don't need anymore.

I'm not going to discuss ways of circumventing the migration strategy. It's the 
strategy we've used for many years and it works. It would be great if it were 
not necessary, but there are too many variables. Potentially each port's build 
system might have some code in it that activates only on certain versions of OS 
X, so the safest way to make sure you're getting the correct software for your 
OS X version is to build the software on that OS X version.

_______________________________________________
macports-users mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.macosforge.org/mailman/listinfo/macports-users

Reply via email to