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Date:      Mon, 22 Mar 1999 13:45:43 -0800 (PST)
From:      "Richard J. Dawes" <rjdawes@physics.ucsd.edu>
To:        Mike Meyer <mwm@phone.net>
Cc:        stable@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Musings about tracking FreeBSD...
Message-ID:  <Pine.SOL.3.96.990322132540.17952E-100000@huntington>
In-Reply-To: <Pine.BSF.4.05.9903221142550.414-100000@guru.phone.net>

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Hi!
	How about if you write a script that gets a list of ports you've
installed (or just ones you worry about).  Then it goes through your
mail from the "cvs-all" mailing-list, and adds those regarding your list
of ports to a file (sorted to taste), discarding the rest.  Run nightly,
or whenever you make world.
	A quick scan of the output should indicate the ports you might
wish to upgrade.  Might not be too hard in PERL.  Just an idea... Good
luck!

--Rich


On Mon, 22 Mar 1999, Mike Meyer wrote:
> [...]
> However, that brings up yet *another* level of problem. Even if you
> follow the correct procedures completely (or at least as completely as
> they have been specified here), you can still wind up with broken
> binaries from the /ports tree. In fact, the first time I did a system
> update, I did exactly that: update the source tree, build the world,
> install the world, build a new kernel, install the new kernel, run
> mergemaster, and reboot. Everything worked fine. Then I dumped / &
> /usr to disk and tried to burn a CD-ROM of those dumps for archival
> purposes - only to have cdrecord die in the middle with an illegal
> system call. Rebuilding cdrecord solved the problem, but this
> illustrates that the recommended procedure is incomplete - you need to
> reinstall all ports/packages as well, right? Is there a tool that
> inspects /var/db/pkg to automate that process?
> [...]




========================================
Richard J. Dawes	rdawes@ucsd.edu
========================================



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