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Reload this Page Configuring the ports package manager recommended?
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Old 12-16-2006   #1 (permalink)
technossomy
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Configuring the ports package manager recommended?

Dear all

I have a few programs I frequently use and that I would like to be included in the ports package manager. Is manually configuring the *BSD package manager recommended? A few considerations:
- It would alleviate pains in creating a script that could be distributed across machines/users instead
- If a new release of the program comes out, does the package manager need to be updated manually too or can this be automated somehow? Regex perhaps?
- Are there any stability issues reported/experienced after having configured the package manager?

Thanks in advance

Tech
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Old 12-18-2006   #2 (permalink)
cipherus
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i have no idea what you are saying in this post... heh
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Old 12-18-2006   #3 (permalink)
anomie
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I thought it was just me. The question totally lost me.

technossomy, could you explain the basic goal you're trying to accomplish?
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Old 12-19-2006   #4 (permalink)
technossomy
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Apologies for the confusion. Example: program XYZ is publicly available from ftp://url_xyz and I would like to include it in a standard install. I could build from source every time I need it, but perhaps there is a point in incorporating XYZ in the package manager. Which scenario is recommended?
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Old 12-19-2006   #5 (permalink)
cipherus
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this might be of some use to you:

http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/f...er/036772.html

you should be able to build your own package right into the ports tree (using the other packages as reference).. but this is not something i've done.
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Old 12-20-2006   #6 (permalink)
technossomy
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Thanks, that definitely helps. So this approach is portable? Ie, can be distributed across machines and/or can be maintained centralised?

Thanks in advance
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Old 12-24-2006   #7 (permalink)
cipherus
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yes, i'm sure there's a way you can have a local computer act as the rsync host for fetching ports. i have never done it though, as i don't have enough freebsd boxen at home to make it worthwhile.
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