Re: How download installed packages' sourcesfiles
On Friday 25 March 2005 20:49, RW wrote: > On Friday 25 March 2005 14:25, O. Hartmann wrote: > > Unforunately "portupdate" does not have a simple functionality to gather > > all tarballs from each installed > > port and its friends it depends on. > > Maybe someone of you has a similar limitation and can help. > > what about > > portupgrade -Fa Actually portupgrade -FRa is more reliable, I think that does make checksum-recursive in the origin of for each entry in the package database ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: How download installed packages' sourcesfiles
On Friday 25 March 2005 14:25, O. Hartmann wrote: > Hello. > I run into the follwoing problem. > Using an internet connected at my lab makes me happy installing each > package I need from source. > At home I have only a very slow moem connection, but I need also the > same packages (not precompiled, > the sources) there. > > One idea was to "fetch" every source tarball of every installed > port-package as reported in /var/db/pkg, > burn /usr/ports/distfiles in conjunction with a up to date > /usr/Ports-tree on one or two DVDs and > the copy this at home on the disk (capacity is not an issue). > > Unforunately "portupdate" does not have a simple functionality to gather > all tarballs from each installed > port and its friends it depends on. > Maybe someone of you has a similar limitation and can help. what about portupgrade -Fa ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: How download installed packages' sourcesfiles
Chuck Swiger schrieb: O. Hartmann wrote: [ ... ] Unforunately "portupdate" does not have a simple functionality to gather all tarballs from each installed port and its friends it depends on. Maybe someone of you has a similar limitation and can help. Try using "make fetch-recursive" from a port's directory to fetch the source tarballs for that port and it's dependencies. Note that you can also create packages from the installed ports and copy those over to another machine, and install them directly rather than recompiling everything. [ Start with a "mkdir /usr/ports/packages", and the ports system will create package tarballs automaticly under there... ] All right, this works, but I still have to check what port is installed. The reason for this uncommon way is, my lab's computer is a i386 machine while at home I would like to run an amd64 based system without IA32 compatibility. Building packages on the source machine isn't an option. Thank you very much for that hint. Oliver ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: How download installed packages' sourcesfiles
This one time, at band camp, Chuck Swiger wrote: > O. Hartmann wrote: > [ ... ] > > Unforunately "portupdate" does not have a simple functionality to gather > > all tarballs from each installed port and its friends it depends on. > > Maybe someone of you has a similar limitation and can help. > > Try using "make fetch-recursive" from a port's directory to fetch the > source tarballs for that port and it's dependencies. Note that you can > also create packages from the installed ports and copy those over to > another machine, and install them directly rather than recompiling > everything. > > [ Start with a "mkdir /usr/ports/packages", and the ports system will > create package tarballs automaticly under there... ] Actually a "make checksum-recursive" might be better if he is goint to burn the distfiles to a DVD, that way if there is a partial distfile already make will notice it and resume downloading it. smime.p7s Description: S/MIME cryptographic signature
Re: How download installed packages' sourcesfiles
O. Hartmann wrote: [ ... ] Unforunately "portupdate" does not have a simple functionality to gather all tarballs from each installed port and its friends it depends on. Maybe someone of you has a similar limitation and can help. Try using "make fetch-recursive" from a port's directory to fetch the source tarballs for that port and it's dependencies. Note that you can also create packages from the installed ports and copy those over to another machine, and install them directly rather than recompiling everything. [ Start with a "mkdir /usr/ports/packages", and the ports system will create package tarballs automaticly under there... ] -- -Chuck ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
How download installed packages' sourcesfiles
Hello. I run into the follwoing problem. Using an internet connected at my lab makes me happy installing each package I need from source. At home I have only a very slow moem connection, but I need also the same packages (not precompiled, the sources) there. One idea was to "fetch" every source tarball of every installed port-package as reported in /var/db/pkg, burn /usr/ports/distfiles in conjunction with a up to date /usr/Ports-tree on one or two DVDs and the copy this at home on the disk (capacity is not an issue). Unforunately "portupdate" does not have a simple functionality to gather all tarballs from each installed port and its friends it depends on. Maybe someone of you has a similar limitation and can help. Thanks, Oliver ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"