Thanks for a very helpful response.
I have another query. As a matter of practice, is it a good idea to upgrade
ports immediately after a kernel compile ?
I do not expect that the ports depend directly on the kernel (for most changes
in kernel), though I could well be wrong (for instance cdreco
Ewald Jenisch wrote:
>
> I usually do it this way:
>
> 1) copy /usr/share/examples/cvsup/ports-supfile to
>/root
>
> 2) Edit /root/ports-supfile so that it points to
your
>preferred CVSup-site; the only thing you need to
>change is the "*default host" entry.
>
> 3) run cvsup: cvsup
On Tue, Mar 01, 2005 at 10:15:05PM -0500, Madhusudan Singh wrote:
> Hi
>
> I am new to FreeBSD and trying to use CVSup after someone suggested it to me
> on comp.unix.misc.bsd.freebsd.
>
> My supfile :
>
> *default tag=.
> *default host=cvsup.FreeBSD.org
> *default prefix=/usr
> *default bas
Hi
I am new to FreeBSD and trying to use CVSup after someone suggested it to me
on comp.unix.misc.bsd.freebsd.
My supfile :
*default tag=.
*default host=cvsup.FreeBSD.org
*default prefix=/usr
*default base=/var/db
*default release=cvs delete use-rel-suffix compress
ports-all release=cvs
I
On Tue, 14 Oct 2003 07:19:25 -0800, "Jon Reynolds" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
said:
> If I install applications from the ports tree and make all the
> configuration changes then upgrade my system using cvsup, will that
> break all the installed applications? Like say one of my apps has been
> updated for
If I install applications from the ports tree and make all the
configuration changes then upgrade my system using cvsup, will that
break all the installed applications? Like say one of my apps has been
updated for a security hole, will it break it?
Jon