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Date:      Thu, 31 Jan 2008 21:26:10 -0600
From:      Bob Willcox <bob@immure.com>
To:        Parish <parish@magichamster.com>
Cc:        ports list <freebsd-ports@FreeBSD.org>
Subject:   Re: Upgrading xorg 6.9 to 7.3 -- what happened to xorg-upgrade?
Message-ID:  <20080201032610.GA23869@rancor.immure.com>
In-Reply-To: <47A26F8B.2070803@magichamster.com>
References:  <20080131203425.GA26119@rancor.immure.com> <20080131205623.GW62012@atarininja.org> <20080201001036.GB26119@rancor.immure.com> <47A26F8B.2070803@magichamster.com>

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On Fri, Feb 01, 2008 at 01:02:03AM +0000, Parish wrote:
> Bob Willcox wrote:
>> No, I'm not interested in the script(1) part. I am familiar with script
>> but wasn't interested in using it here. What I want is the xorg-upgrade
>> program that is used to move a bunch of x11 files to new places for the
>> 7.x version.
>> 
> 
> xorg-upgrade is the file that script(1) spews all the output into so, if 
> the upgrade fails, you've got all the info to work out why (which is why 
> UPDATING suggests using script(1)). IIRC when I did the 6.9 -> 7.x upgrade 
> xorg-upgrade ended up being something like 30MB!!
> 
>  From script(1):
> 
>   script [-akq] [-t time] [file [command ...]]
> 
> [...]
> 
>   If the argument file is given, script saves all dialogue in file.
> 
> HTH

Thanks for the info Mark, however I do know what script does and why
one might use it (I've used it for years for just that, and I'm not
even trying to use it here).

What I was asking about (please re-read my subject line) was the
xorg-upgrade command itself. Where is it located? I can't find it
anywhere on any of my 10 FreeBSD systems (and I know it used to exist
because I have used it in the past).

Bob

> 
> Regards,
> 
> Mark

-- 
Bob Willcox                      A lack of planning on your part does
bob@immure.com                   not constitute an emergency on my part.
Austin, TX                          



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