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Date:      Thu, 29 Mar 2007 14:55:24 -0400
From:      Lowell Gilbert <freebsd-chat-local@be-well.ilk.org>
To:        freebsd-chat@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: the art of pkgdb -F
Message-ID:  <44y7lfanhf.fsf@be-well.ilk.org>
In-Reply-To: <460BFE42.70307@daleco.biz> (Kevin Kinsey's message of "Thu\, 29 Mar 2007 12\:58\:26 -0500")
References:  <20070328011712.GR11147@tigger.digitaltorque.ca> <8cb6106e0703271834l9014bffp8f1d5e753f7ec108@mail.gmail.com> <8EEB22EE-7230-4EEC-BEFE-514EBE059992@goldmark.org> <460A9689.2010506@daleco.biz> <20070329003400.GV11147@tigger.digitaltorque.ca> <460B3316.7080405@daleco.biz> <17931.14232.757720.812186@jerusalem.litteratus.org> <460BFE42.70307@daleco.biz>

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Kevin Kinsey <kdk@daleco.biz> writes:

> [cc: redirected >> chat@]
>
> Robert Huff wrote:
>> Kevin Kinsey writes:
>>
>>>  But I bet I'm not the only one who, once upon a time, happened to
>>>  try "portupgrade -arR" or equivalent after forgetting to read
>>>  UPDATING and ended up with more to do than I originally thought.
>>
>> 	Might as well paint "PLEASE KICK ME!" and an arrow pointing
>> down on your back ....
>>
>
> LOL! Maybe --- depends on the foot to be applied.  Dad
> has a big foot; thankfully enough, I suppose, it hasn't
> been placed there for 30 years give or take.  

I update my ports often enough that I've always been lucky so far when
I forget to check UPDATING.

> Now, at work, I'm  the boss, so if I have to deinstall every port on
> the box, I can take the day off and let it compile as long as Apache,
> PHP, dovecot, and fetchmail get "pkg_add" called first thing before
> anyone else shows up.  (I suppose one difficulty there is that PHP
> seems to be more temperamental than it used to be before all the
> modules were "split off", but maybe that's
> the fact I've not played with the thing much lately other
> than to write code in it.)
>
> Which might show that there is some advantage to being
> a "one and 2/3" person organization.  Of course, I can't
> think of many others that apply at present.

Well, yeah.  In a bigger organization, there should be a extra
machines to help limit (or avoid) the downtime.  You can imitate that
situation on a single box by using a chroot environment to build all
of your ports before installing any of them.



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