Re: [gentoo-user] emerge -f
On Tuesday 22 May 2007 07:42:57 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: So, does the emptytree (-e) option basically tell it that you don't have ANYTHING instlled where it should be? :P Yes, it empties the depend tree. So portage thinks that no software is installed. -- Naga -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] emerge -f
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: So, does the emptytree (-e) option basically tell it that you don't have ANYTHING instlled where it should be? :P Well, if you do a emerge -e world, it will recompile everything on your system. I do mean everything. On mine it takes a little over 48 hours. That is usually only done to fix something as a last resort or when upgrading gcc. That help? Dale :-) :-) :-) -- www.myspace.com/-remove-me-dalek1967 Copy n paste then remove the -remove-me- part.
Re: [gentoo-user] emerge -f
On Tuesday 22 May 2007 08:01:19 Naga wrote: So, does the emptytree (-e) option basically tell it that you don't have ANYTHING instlled where it should be? :P Yes, it empties the depend tree. So portage thinks that no software is installed. That's an implementation detail that used to be true but isn't any longer. That's why it no longer says [ebuild N] for all packages with -e. Doing so caused problems with circular dependencies. It just remerges everything in world and all their dependencies. Calling it 'everything' is wrong too as it doesn't do anything with packages that aren't in world or a dependency of something in world. -- Bo Andresen signature.asc Description: This is a digitally signed message part.
Re: [gentoo-user] emerge -f
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: If I use emerge -f on a package, will it fetch that packaged dependencies as well? For instance, if I use 'emerge -f xorg-x11', will it check the system, then download everything that it needs to install that package? If I were to use 'emerge -uf world', would there be a huge number of packaged downloaded? ^_^ --- Ken If you want to make sure you get everything, I would do a emerge -ef package. That should get everything needed for sure. The e stands for emptytree but I always think of it as everything. If used with the option world it gets everything needed to recompile the complete system. Example: emerge -ef world Hope that helps. Dale :-) :-) :-) :-) -- www.myspace.com/-remove-me-dalek1967 Copy n paste then remove the -remove-me- part. -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
RE: [gentoo-user] emerge -f
-Original Message- From: Dale [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, May 22, 2007 2:26 PM To: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org Subject: Re: [gentoo-user] emerge -f [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: If I use emerge -f on a package, will it fetch that packaged dependencies as well? For instance, if I use 'emerge -f xorg-x11', will it check the system, Snip --- Ken If you want to make sure you get everything, I would do a emerge -ef package. That should get everything needed for sure. The e stands for emptytree but I always think of it as everything. If used with the option world it gets everything needed to recompile the complete system. Example: emerge -ef world Hope that helps. Dale So, does the emptytree (-e) option basically tell it that you don't have ANYTHING instlled where it should be? :P -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list