Date: Wed, 29 Mar 2006 22:58:14 +0200 From: Roman Neuhauser <neuhauser@sigpipe.cz> To: Ashok Shrestha <ashok.shrestha@gmail.com> Cc: FreeBSD Ports <ports@freebsd.org> Subject: Re: portinstall question Message-ID: <20060329205814.GB42066@isis.sigpipe.cz> In-Reply-To: <79e2026f0603282303y7dea2312ne6baa505aadc27d@mail.gmail.com> References: <79e2026f0603282303y7dea2312ne6baa505aadc27d@mail.gmail.com>
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# ashok.shrestha@gmail.com / 2006-03-29 02:03:06 -0500: > Hi all, > > I'm installing kde on freebsd 6.0. > > portinstall -rRP x11/kde3 > > > It's been compiling for the past 2 days. (AMD XP 1900) > > 1) > The problem is that once in a while it'll come across a port that > requires user input. So I always OK the default configurations at the > blue screen. Is there a way to get portinstall to accept the default > configurations without user intervention? I tried '--yes' option but > that didn't work. that's BATCH=whatever in the environment or /etc/make.conf > 2) > I expected the '-P' option to download the majority of the > dependencies as binary packages. But that doesn't seem to be the case; > it seems like everything is being compiled. Unless I unintentionally > specified '-p' (lowercase), shouldn't there be more binary downloads > and faster installs? -P means /try/ a package. You have most probably updated your /usr/ports tree since 6.0, and whereas pkg_add uses the symlink web on the ftp server to find the right package for your release based on the package basename you give it, portupgrade -P will try to fetch <package>-<version> from the server, using your current /usr/ports to arrive at both values. -- How many Vietnam vets does it take to screw in a light bulb? You don't know, man. You don't KNOW. Cause you weren't THERE. http://bash.org/?255991
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