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Date:      Sun, 05 Apr 2009 18:33:22 -0500
From:      Paul Schmehl <pschmehl_lists@tx.rr.com>
To:        illoai@gmail.com, Peter Wang <peterwang@vip.qq.com>, freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: How to find out which ports contains a specified command.
Message-ID:  <2B08274BD5B112278E9DF1D2@Macintosh-2.local>
In-Reply-To: <d7195cff0904051513m554616eaha6196f91931c81e6@mail.gmail.com>
References:  <u7i1zhrwd.fsf@vip.qq.com> <d7195cff0904051513m554616eaha6196f91931c81e6@mail.gmail.com>

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--On April 5, 2009 6:13:57 PM -0400 illoai@gmail.com wrote:

> 2009/4/5 Peter Wang <peterwang@vip.qq.com>:
>>
>> for example, after i installed pfsense, which is based on freebsd
>> release 7.1, i found adduser command is missing.
>>
>> so how to find out which ports contains `adduser' command?
>> thanks for your replies.
>>
>
> % which adduser
> /usr/sbin/adduser
>
> Thus it is part of the base system, installed through /usr/src
> rather than /usr/ports.
>
> Also, as you are running (essentially) 7.x, this is probably
> better on freebsd-questions than current.

I think you misunderstood his question.

This would be one way to do it:

 find /usr/ports/ -type f -exec grep -sq adduser {} \; -print

Paul Schmehl, If it isn't already
obvious, my opinions are my own
and not those of my employer.
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