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Date:      Sat, 21 Aug 1999 17:34:27 +0100
From:      Nik Clayton <nik@freebsd.org>
To:        ports@freebsd.org
Subject:   Should every package also have a port?
Message-ID:  <19990821173427.A73931@catkin.nothing-going-on.org>

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-ports,

[ Not on this list, please cc: replies to me ]

Are there any rules that say that if something is available as a package
then it should also be available as a port?

The FreeBSD Documentation (FAQ, Handbook, et al) will shortly be available
as FreeBSD packages, suitable for pkg_add(1).

I'm wondering whether it's worthwhile creating a port skeleton for each
one of these packages, where

    % cd /usr/ports/fdp/faq        [1]
    % make "FORMATS=html html-split" LANG=en_US.ISO_8859-1 install

would just run the equivalent of

    % pkg_add ftp://.../faq-en_US.ISO_8859-1-html.tgz
    % pkg_add ftp://.../faq-en_US.ISO_8859-1-html-split.tgz

and where "make package" would be a no-op.  Also, there could be no 
checksum file, because the documentation packages would be rebuilt daily
(or, at the very least, weekly).

Personally, I don't think this is worth the hassle.  But I'm not a ports 
guy, so I figure the final call is in your hands.

Thoughts?

N 
-- 
 [intentional self-reference] can be easily accommodated using a blessed,
 non-self-referential dummy head-node whose own object destructor severs
 the links.
    -- Tom Christiansen in <375143b5@cs.colorado.edu>


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