Re: port diagnose bug

2017-02-02 Thread Mark Bestley
On 01/02/2017 06:42, Ryan Schmidt wrote: On Jan 31, 2017, at 14:36, Mark Bestley wrote: On 31/01/2017 12:30, Barry Scott wrote: On 28 Jan 2017, at 18:40, Mark Bestley wrote: port diagnose gives me Warning: your $PATH environment variable does not

Re: Port Diagnose Issue - [FAILED] - dylib

2017-02-02 Thread Christopher Stone
On Feb 01, 2017, at 16:20, Ryan Schmidt wrote: >> The thing I find most odd about this are all the symlinks. > > What do you find odd about the symlinks? __ Thanks Ryan and Clemens. That gives me the

Re: selfupdate error

2017-02-02 Thread Rainer Müller
On 2017-02-02 17:40, p...@uvic.ca wrote: > The "sudo port -d selfupdate" on my machine is failing with a > "command execution failed" error. I have attached a gzip'd terminal > output from the command. I suspect this is almost certainly due > to an issue with my own setup since I have seen no

Re: override local port

2017-02-02 Thread Chris Jones
Hi, On 02/02/17 16:16, db wrote: On 2 Feb 2017, at 16:34, Mojca Miklavec wrote: If you only want to do it once, you can cd to the folder with the port that you want to use and run "sudo port ..." from there. Hmm…no, I thought I could mark the ports' default

Re: override local port

2017-02-02 Thread db
On 2 Feb 2017, at 16:34, Mojca Miklavec wrote: > If you only want to do it once, you can cd to the folder with the port > that you want to use and run "sudo port ..." from there. Hmm…no, I thought I could mark the ports' default priority/availability, something like

Re: override local port

2017-02-02 Thread Mojca Miklavec
On 2 February 2017 at 16:02, db wrote: > I already have a local repo — I'd like a port in the rsync tree to > exceptionally override the local one (higher preference) while keeping both > in place. If you only want to do it once, you can cd to the folder with the port that

Re: override local port

2017-02-02 Thread db
I already have a local repo — I'd like a port in the rsync tree to exceptionally override the local one (higher preference) while keeping both in place. On 2 Feb 2017, at 14:31, Mojca Miklavec wrote: > On 2 February 2017 at 09:17, db wrote: >> How can I override a local

Re: override local port

2017-02-02 Thread Mojca Miklavec
On 2 February 2017 at 09:17, db wrote: > How can I override a local portfile without deleting it? I want to keep some > ports locally, for example, after I submitted a new, locally tested port that > made it in the repo, or when I want to keep an older portfile until I fully > tested the latest

Re: override local port

2017-02-02 Thread Rainer Müller
On 2017-02-02 09:17, db wrote: > How can I override a local portfile without deleting it? I want to keep some > ports locally, for example, after I submitted a new, locally tested port that > made it in the repo, or when I want to keep an older portfile until I fully > tested the latest version

Re: Prevent MacPorts editing .bash_profile over and over again...

2017-02-02 Thread Chris Jones
On 01/02/17 17:23, Barry Scott wrote: On 1 Feb 2017, at 14:20, Bachsau > wrote: Am 01.02.2017 um 07:38 schrieb Ryan Schmidt: Sorry. Repeated modifications of the profile when the modifications were already there was a bug. It looks like a fix

override local port

2017-02-02 Thread db
How can I override a local portfile without deleting it? I want to keep some ports locally, for example, after I submitted a new, locally tested port that made it in the repo, or when I want to keep an older portfile until I fully tested the latest version of an application.