But if one erases everything along the
https://guide.macports.org/chunked/installing.macports.uninstalling.html
what is the use to run macports uninstall ? Isn’t everything wiped out once
/opt/local is erased ?
The page first describes the uninstall command. That will be enough for
many. The 'rm -rf' is described as a second option, if you *really* want
to get rid of everything. You can run one or the other, take you pick.
You can run both, but indeed once you run the second whether or not you
ran he first is a moot point, its redundant.
L.
Le 18 avr. 2018 à 15:49, Chris Jones <jon...@hep.phy.cam.ac.uk> a écrit :
On 18/04/18 14:44, pagani laurent via macports-users wrote:
You are right of course. So I ended up removing everything which was not
installed yesterday or today and that cured it but is there a way to clean up
completely /opt/local without removing Macports itself so that one can reply
the reinstall script easily ?
If you first follow the instructions at
https://trac.macports.org/wiki/Migration
to create the lists of ports you have installed, you can then if you wish
replace steps c and d
c Uninstall all installed ports:
sudo port -f uninstall installed
d Clean any partially-completed builds:
sudo rm -rf /opt/local/var/macports/build/*
with the nuke at
https://guide.macports.org/chunked/installing.macports.uninstalling.html
and then still uses the previously saved list of ports to reinstall the ports,
once you have reinstalled macports.
Laurent
Le 18 avr. 2018 à 15:18, Rainer Müller <rai...@macports.org
<mailto:rai...@macports.org>> a écrit :
On 2018-04-18 15:07, pagani laurent wrote:
after uninstalling everything and following the ”migration” tuto (and removing
tk from requested ports), I tried to install py36-jupyter but it stopped again
with the gnureadline install which still fails in the same way as before
(complaining about some scipy directory) though in principle there is nothing
left from outside/weird installations.
No port command will get rid of this file/directory when it is not
provided by a MacPorts port. You will have to clean it up manually.
---> Configuring py36-gnureadline
---> Building py36-gnureadline
Error: Failed to build py36-gnureadline: command execution failed
Error: See
/opt/local/var/macports/logs/_opt_local_var_macports_sources_rsync.macports.org_release_tarballs_ports_python_py-gnureadline/py36-gnureadline/main.log
for details.
(attached)
Is this file provided by a port? If not, you must have installed it in
some other way.
port provides
/opt/local/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.6/lib/python3.6/site-packages/scipy-0.19.1.dist-info
it says it is a directory.
Note also that py36-scipy was installed earlier today with MP on my request
without failure.
This file is definitely not coming from the current version of
py36-scipy. I assume you used 'sudo pip install' before (or some script
did) and that installed python packages directly into the MacPorts prefix.
The simplest solution is to just move this directory away:
sudo mv
/opt/local/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.6/lib/python3.6/site-packages/scipy-0.19.1.dist-info
~/Desktop/
Rainer
"S'il n'y a pas de solution, c'est qu'il n'y a pas de problème" (devise Shadok)
"S'il n'y a pas de solution, c'est qu'il n'y a pas de problème" (devise Shadok)