On Mon, Jun 16, 2008 at 11:45 AM, Oliver Fromme <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Gilles <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Currently, to find where a software is located under /usr/ports/, I
> > rune the "find" command. Is there a database that I could query
> > instead so that it gives out the whole pa
On Mon, 16 Jun 2008 17:45:37 +0200 (CEST), Oliver Fromme
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>http://www.secnetix.de/tools/porgle/
Thanks guys for the suggestions.
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Gilles <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Currently, to find where a software is located under /usr/ports/, I
> rune the "find" command. Is there a database that I could query
> instead so that it gives out the whole path to that the application?
In addition to the ways that others have suggested, th
Modulok wrote:
On 6/13/08, Chris Hill <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Fri, 13 Jun 2008, Gilles wrote:
Hello
Currently, to find where a software is located under /usr/ports/, I
rune the "find" command. Is there a database that I could query
instead so that it gives out the whole path to
On 6/13/08, Chris Hill <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Fri, 13 Jun 2008, Gilles wrote:
>
>> Hello
>>
>> Currently, to find where a software is located under /usr/ports/, I
>> rune the "find" command. Is there a database that I could query
>> instead so that it gives out the whole path to that the a
On Fri, 13 Jun 2008, Gilles wrote:
Hello
Currently, to find where a software is located under /usr/ports/, I
rune the "find" command. Is there a database that I could query
instead so that it gives out the whole path to that the application?
I wrote a lame-ass script to do this:
$ more /home
On Fri, 13 Jun 2008 12:43:13 +0200, Andreas Rudisch <"cyb."@gmx.net>
wrote:
>You can use 'make search name=' or 'make search key='
Thanks, much faster.
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On Fri, 13 Jun 2008 10:51:28 +0200
Gilles <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello
>
> Currently, to find where a software is located under /usr/ports/, I
> rune the "find" command. Is there a database that I could query
> instead so that it gives out the whole path to that the application?
>
> Thank
I use
cd /usr/ports && make search name=portname
It will return extraneous results from time to time.
eg.
[/usr/ports](11:39:22)
[EMAIL PROTECTED] /usr/ports && make search name=lftp
Port: lftp-3.7.3_1
Path: /usr/ports/ftp/lftp
Info: Shell-like command line ftp client
Maint: [EMAIL PROTECT
On Fri, 13 Jun 2008 11:39:10 +0200, Gilles <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
>Thanks. That seems to be the fastest way:
Actually... no:
# whereis samba
samba: /usr/ports/japanese/samba
# whereis samba3
samba3: /usr/ports/japanese/samba3
# find /usr/ports/ -name "samba*"
[...]
/usr/ports/net/samba3
Wh
On Fri, 13 Jun 2008 10:17:02 +0100, "Catalin Miclaus"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Try 'whereis portname'.
Thanks. That seems to be the fastest way:
# whereis lftp
lftp: /usr/local/bin/lftp /usr/local/man/man1/lftp.1.gz
/usr/ports/ftp/lftp
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Gilles skrev:
> Hello
>
> Currently, to find where a software is located under /usr/ports/, I
> rune the "find" command. Is there a database that I could query
> instead so that it gives out the whole path to that the application?
>
> Thank you.
Try 'whereis portname'.
Best Regards
Catalin
Gilles skrev:
Hello
Currently, to find where a software is located under /usr/ports/, I
rune the "find" command. Is there a database that I could query
instead so that it gives out the whole path to that the application?
Thank you.
Or
http://www.se.freebsd.org/ports/index.html
__
Hello
Currently, to find where a software is located under /usr/ports/, I
rune the "find" command. Is there a database that I could query
instead so that it gives out the whole path to that the application?
grep in /usr/ports/INDEX
or
ls -ld /usr/ports/*/packagename
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Hello
Currently, to find where a software is located under /usr/ports/, I
rune the "find" command. Is there a database that I could query
instead so that it gives out the whole path to that the application?
Thank you.
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