Date: Tue, 28 Jun 2005 19:49:19 +0200 From: Jose M Rodriguez <josemi@freebsd.jazztel.es> To: thierry@herbelot.com Cc: ports@freebsd.org Subject: Re: bug in patching phase of cups-pstoraster Message-ID: <200506281949.20089.josemi@redesjm.local> In-Reply-To: <200506281435.33658.thierry@herbelot.com> References: <200506281236.08334.thierry@herbelot.com> <200506281337.07507.josemi@redesjm.local> <200506281435.33658.thierry@herbelot.com>
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El Martes, 28 de Junio de 2005 14:35, Thierry Herbelot escribi=F3: > Le Tuesday 28 June 2005 13:37, Jose M Rodriguez a =E9crit : > > El Martes, 28 de Junio de 2005 12:36, Thierry Herbelot escribi=F3: > > > Hello, > > > > > > I have here a R/O shared ports tree, under the /files2 mount > > > point. A symbolic link points from /usr/ports to /files2/ports > > > > This is not enough. You must define PORTSDIR. > > This is indeed a work-around, but this is the first port where I saw > this kind of problem (and I have some *hundreds* of ports which build > correctly without setting PORTSDIR). > No, that's how this works. I can also point to several ports that uses=20 this kind of construct that will break without PORTSDIR. This is pointed by ports(7) and the notes on ${PORTSDIR}/Mk/bsd.port.mk. I can make the construct based on CURDIR, but this is the most often see=20 form of doing depends. =2D- josemi
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