Date: Tue, 25 Feb 2003 16:37:38 -0600 From: Mike Meyer <mwm-dated-1046644658.41270e@mired.org> To: Antoine Jacoutot <ajacoutot@lphp.org> Cc: "freebsd-questions@freebsd.org" <freebsd-questions@freebsd.org> Subject: Re: saving port settings (Was: stupid question) Message-ID: <15963.61490.1990.432210@guru.mired.org> In-Reply-To: <200302252329.31019.ajacoutot@lphp.org> References: <1046198601.3e5bb9499e7b5@webmail.lphp.org> <15963.58608.965159.133416@guru.mired.org> <200302252329.31019.ajacoutot@lphp.org>
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In <200302252329.31019.ajacoutot@lphp.org>, Antoine Jacoutot <ajacoutot@lphp.org> typed:
> > Use portupgrade, from the ports tree. Then you can do "portupgrade
> > imapd" to update it, and it'll look in $(PREFIX)/etc/pkgtools.conf to
> > see what settings you want to use.
> Hum I can't find anything to resolve my problem within that file.
Quoting the comments in my copy of that file:
# MAKE_ARGS: hash
#
# This is a hash of ports glob => arguments mapping. portupgrade(1)
# and portinstall(1) look it up to pick command line arguments to
# pass to make(1). You can use wildcards ("ports glob"). If a
# port/package matches multiple entries, all the arguments are
# joined using the space as separator.
#
# cf. -m/--make-args of portupgrade(1), ports_glob(1)
#
# e.g.:
# MAKE_ARGS = {
# 'databases/mysql323-*' => 'WITH_CHARSET=ujis',
# }
That looks like exactly what you're looking for.
<mike
--
Mike Meyer <mwm@mired.org> http://www.mired.org/consulting.html
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