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Date:      Sun, 27 Jul 2014 19:02:12 -0400 (EDT)
From:      Benjamin Kaduk <kaduk@MIT.EDU>
To:        Andrew Berg <aberg010@my.hennepintech.edu>
Cc:        freebsd-doc@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: HOWTO articles for migrating from Linux to FreeBSD, especially for pkg?
Message-ID:  <alpine.GSO.1.10.1407271900470.21571@multics.mit.edu>
In-Reply-To: <53D34B3C.9060209@my.hennepintech.edu>
References:  <CAG=rPVcyqq2072%2BgF_X91BocxykJB6%2BU0cMhaNexxfVFpVqUbA@mail.gmail.com> <CAG=rPVfBcci_fqAKW4j530QVY-OALu51ZjtVoM5n%2BmPg=LJLXQ@mail.gmail.com> <alpine.BSF.2.11.1407251459370.72188@wonkity.com> <20140726050648.GA14755@exhan.dylanleigh.net> <53D34B3C.9060209@my.hennepintech.edu>

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On Sat, 26 Jul 2014, Andrew Berg wrote:

> On 2014.07.26 00:06, Dylan Leigh wrote:
>> The big difference between them from a user POV is that pkg
>> still requires a bit of knowledge of ports and how it works
>> (what options are, categories etc.) whereas using apt requires
>> no knowledge of the Ubuntu package infrastructure or how .deb
>> files are built.
> Well, to be fair, do .deb packages really have options? It's been a while since
> I've used them, but IIRC, if you were to just not tell the user what the
> options are, it would be the same as a .deb package.

The major linux distributions which use .deb-format packages do not have 
anything which might be said to resemble the options available from the 
FreeBSD ports framework.  That said, .deb is basically just a file format, 
and an individual could tweak the makefile used to build such packages to 
include options-like functionality, on a per-package basis.

-Ben



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