Date: Mon, 19 Nov 2001 08:59:35 -0500 From: Kutulu <kutulu@kutulu.org> To: Roger Merritt <mcrogerm@stjohn.ac.th> Cc: freebsd-stable@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: cvsup of ports, then what? Message-ID: <20011119085935.A58233@pr0n.kutulu.org> In-Reply-To: <3.0.6.32.20011119132610.00827760@stjohn.stjohn.ac.th>; from mcrogerm@stjohn.ac.th on Mon, Nov 19, 2001 at 01:26:10PM %2B0700 References: <20011116025723.T8046@seven.alameda.net> <NDBBIMKICMDGDMNOOCAIEEKIDOAA.patrick@mip.co.za> <20011116025723.T8046@seven.alameda.net> <01111605542200.01330@proxy.the-i-pa.com> <3.0.6.32.20011119132610.00827760@stjohn.stjohn.ac.th>
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On Mon, Nov 19, 2001 at 01:26:10PM +0700, Bill Moran wrote: >On Friday 16 November 2001 05:57, Ulf Zimmermann wrote: >>On Fri, Nov 16, 2001 at 12:51:55PM +0200, Patrick O'Reilly wrote: >>> I have a number (15 or so) of packages/ports installed. Do I need to run >>> "make" for each of my ports again? Or is there something simpler that >>> will know which ports I have installed and do them all together for me? > You can check the port version against what is installed, I am not aware >> of any tool providing this at this time (hey, another little project to >> do if nobody has done it already) > Check out pkg_version. It doesn't automate the whole process, but it will give > you a nice listing of what needs updated and what is already up to date. The portupgrade (in ports/sysutils/portupgrade) will do this for you as well. Run: portupgrade --noexec "*" and it will scan through all the ports, telling you which ones it would have upgraded, and to which versions, had you let it exec. --K To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-stable" in the body of the message
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