Date: Tue, 8 Jul 2003 22:50:03 +0200 From: Farid Hajji <me@farid-hajji.de> To: Chuck Swiger <cswiger@mac.com> Cc: freebsd-stable@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Hardening production servers Message-ID: <200307082250.03189.me@farid-hajji.de> In-Reply-To: <3F0B2AAE.5080708@mac.com> References: <20030708200104.GA66624@cnt.org> <3F0B2AAE.5080708@mac.com>
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> If you do a "make package" for each port that you install, you can copy of > using network filesharing (NFS, Samba, etc) to distribute the > /usr/ports/packages directory. Create that directory if it doesn't exist, > and "make package" will save the .tgz there rather than under each > individual port directory. Beware of ports that try to detect the CPU while compiling. mplayer (IIRC) or some CPU intensive ports _may_ detect a P4 on the compling machine and use it, so the binary may not work on vanilla i586s. /etc/make.conf is your friend. -- Farid Hajji. http://www.farid-hajji.net/address.html
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