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Date:      Mon, 30 Jun 2008 19:04:54 +0100
From:      RW <fbsd06@mlists.homeunix.com>
To:        freebsd-ports@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Resolution: Portmanager stuck in a loop
Message-ID:  <20080630190454.22e949fc@gumby.homeunix.com.>
In-Reply-To: <7E88CE27089FBA4DAF28262B761808863FD734@MAIL01.caprio.corp>
References:  <7E88CE27089FBA4DAF28262B761808863FD6DB@MAIL01.caprio.corp> <1214577239.63129.7.camel@squirrel.corp.cox.com> <7E88CE27089FBA4DAF28262B761808863FD6FF@MAIL01.caprio.corp> <1214578557.63129.14.camel@squirrel.corp.cox.com> <7E88CE27089FBA4DAF28262B761808863FD734@MAIL01.caprio.corp>

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On Mon, 30 Jun 2008 12:25:26 -0400
"Josh Hanson" <JoshHanson@capriomgt.com> wrote:

> After some very helpful further discussions with Robert, I tried
> running "portmanger -u -p -l -y" to re-build everything, with no
> success. Further digging established that my pkg_info database was
> very confused. (For example, pkg_info reported that cdrtools is
> required by xorg-server and lots of x drivers, which it clearly is
> not.)

No, that's probably correct, but out of date. A lot of xorg ports can
optionally depend on hal, and hal used to depend on cdrtools.

> How it got that bad on such a fresh system is a mystery. I don't know
> what I could have done to mess it up.

Assuming that it is messed-up.

> On a whim, I tried running "pkgdb -F" and "pkgdb -fU", but it didn't
> make anything better.
> 
> Robert suggested that I run pkg_delete -a to start from scratch.

Probably for the best, I think if you are planning to keep the ports
up to date, it's best to skip the on-disk packages and start from
scratch, that way you can skip many months of UPDATING entries. If you
are in a hurry you can start from the 7-stable packages instead.



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