On 6 Apr 2020, at 22:23, Kieran Simpson wrote:
I'm going through my ports installation and pruning out old versions.
I've
cleared out a few Python installs and now Perl is getting the same
treatment. However I've gotten stuck and am not sure on the best way
to
proceed without breaking somethi
Kieran Simpson wrote:
> I'm going through my ports installation and pruning out old versions. I've
> cleared out a few Python installs and now Perl is getting the same
> treatment. However I've gotten stuck and am not sure on the best way to
> proceed without breaking something.
>
> $ port instal
In future please write to our new list addresses at lists.macports.org, not the
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On Apr 6, 2020,
I'm going through my ports installation and pruning out old versions. I've
cleared out a few Python installs and now Perl is getting the same
treatment. However I've gotten stuck and am not sure on the best way to
proceed without breaking something.
$ port installed perl*
The following ports are c
> On 6 Apr 2020, at 8:00 pm, macports-users-requ...@lists.macports.org wrote:
>
> Initially I burned the 64bit Ubuntu 18 version, but it wouldn't boot on my
> 32bit EFI Mac.
>
> There was no 32bit version of Ubuntu 18.04.4 that I saw, so I booted the
> Ubuntu 16.x 32bit version without troub
On Mon, 6 Apr 2020, Daniel J. Luke wrote:
What is ESXi?
VMware's hypervisor (you can read more by typing 'ESXi' into google and
clicking the first link ;-) )
Top link on DuckDuckGo as well :-) I happen to value my privacy...
-- Dave
On Apr 6, 2020, at 5:06 PM, Michael wrote:
>> Did you try a current version of macOS on top of ESXi? I'd be curious if
>> anyone has tested this setup and how is the performance.
>
> What is ESXi?
VMware's hypervisor (you can read more by typing 'ESXi' into google and
clicking the first link ;
> Did you try a current version of macOS on top of ESXi? I'd be curious if
> anyone has tested this setup and how is the performance.
What is ESXi?
---
Entertaining minecraft videos
http://YouTube.com/keybounce
Was just communing with nature, and I see that "clang" finally got built;
it's now hammering on "gnutls" so I may as well go back to bed and pick up
the debris in the morning...
-- Dave
On Apr 6, 2020, at 03:39, Christopher Jones wrote:
> On 6 Apr 2020, at 8:42 am, Dave Horsfall wrote:
>
>> On Mon, 6 Apr 2020, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
>>
>>> You should not routinely use the -p flag like this.
>>
>> I did that following advice on this list about a year ago, when some port
>> ("guil
> On 6 Apr 2020, at 8:42 am, Dave Horsfall wrote:
>
> On Mon, 6 Apr 2020, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
>
>> You should not routinely use the -p flag like this.
>
> I did that following advice on this list about a year ago, when some port
> ("guile"?) that I'd never even heard of would not build.
>
>
On Mon, 6 Apr 2020, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
You should not routinely use the -p flag like this.
I did that following advice on this list about a year ago, when some port
("guile"?) that I'd never even heard of would not build.
Do you mean openssl? or libressl? or something else?
openssl-1.1.
On Apr 6, 2020, at 00:21, Dave Horsfall wrote:
> So this morning I do my weekly "port selfupdate" and "port upgrade -p
> outdated" (I use "-p" to make it keep going with the rest of the ports, come
> hell or high water),
You should not routinely use the -p flag like this.
> and after updati
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