Date: Fri, 13 Mar 2009 20:24:40 +0000 From: Matthew Seaman <m.seaman@infracaninophile.co.uk> To: David Southwell <david@vizion2000.net> Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Managing bsdpan -- some advice please Message-ID: <49BAC108.4000800@infracaninophile.co.uk> In-Reply-To: <200903130748.56558.david@vizion2000.net> References: <200903130748.56558.david@vizion2000.net>
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David Southwell wrote:
> Basically I do not know how to manage the bsdpan "ports".
> On portupgrade -a I get long lists like the one below.
> How are items "held"
> How do I decide whether ort not to hold them.
> Some advice would be appreciated.
> I have searched for some guidance on the freebsd web site but not found=
any.
>=20
> ---> Skipping 'bsdpan-B-Debug-1.10' because it is held by user (specif=
y -f to=20
> force)
> ---> Skipping 'bsdpan-Exporter-5.62' because it is held by user (speci=
fy -f=20
> to force)
> ---> Skipping 'bsdpan-constant-1.15' because it is held by user (speci=
fy -f=20
> to force)
[...]
Well, for starters, you have no choice but to 'hold' a bsdpan package.
The terminology comes from portupgrade, but the same thing applies to
whatever FreeBSD package management system you care to use.
In portupgrade, a 'held' package is one that is listed in the HOLD_PKGS
array in /usr/local/etc/pkgtools.conf. This simply indicates packages tha=
t
portupgrade should not attempt to upgrade for whatever reason.
The default setting is:
HOLD_PKGS =3D [
'bsdpan-*',
]
ie. any 'bsdpan' package installed via 'perl -MCPAN -e' or by manually=20
compiling the module source. These bsdpan packages are just normal=20
FreeBSD packages in every respect but one: they have no package origin
-- that is, there is no directory in the ports tree for a bsdpan package.=
This means that the usual ports system for determining whether a package
is out of date -- comparing either directly or indirectly against the
version number from the port's Makefile -- is impossible to apply and
so ports management software cannot upgrade bsdpan packages.
As a general rule, if there is a ported version of a perl module then
install that, rather than installing the same thing directly from CPAN.
It makes ports management easier and keeping stuff up to date a lot more
effective. Most of the packages you list are available in the ports
tree.
You also have about 15 ordinary p5 ports listed as 'held' -- I'm not sure=
why that should be unless you have deliberately chosen to do that. Maybe=
because they have dependencies on bsdpan packages? Anyhow, you can proba=
bly
sort things out by replacing your bsdpan packages with the ports equivale=
nts
like so:
portupgrade -o www/p5-libwww -f bsdpan-libwww-perl-5.813
(That's actually a slight oddity: usually a perl package Foo::Bar::Baz wi=
ll
appear in ports as mumble/p5-Foo-Bar-Baz)
Cheers,
Matthew
--=20
Dr Matthew J Seaman MA, D.Phil. 7 Priory Courtyard
Flat 3
PGP: http://www.infracaninophile.co.uk/pgpkey Ramsgate
Kent, CT11 9PW
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