Date: Tue, 31 Mar 2009 22:41:53 -0400 From: matt donovan <kitchetech@gmail.com> To: Chuck Robey <chuckr@telenix.org> Cc: ports@freebsd.org, Mark Linimon <linimon@lonesome.com>, flz@freebsd.org Subject: Re: why was XFree86 dropped for ports? Message-ID: <28283d910903311941g72979cb8k9580ebb503f411eb@mail.gmail.com> In-Reply-To: <49D2D32D.3020103@telenix.org> References: <49D24F4A.3060900@telenix.org> <20090331222207.GB7661@lonesome.com> <28283d910903311903q76d4a6fdjda6daa35313c5047@mail.gmail.com> <49D2D32D.3020103@telenix.org>
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<snip> > > > I don't know git anywhere's near as well as I know cvs, but it seems to me > that > xorg doesn't have any TAGS so you can't ask for a particular release, isn't > that > true? I think that is probably a comment on git, not Xorg. I guess, > seeing > that there's about 1/4 the amount of work involved in updating xFree86 > versus > Xorg, I didn't expect that it was a work thing. Finally, I really don't > like > the fact that Xorg comes in all of those little packages, so that without > our > ports system, it might be prohibitively difficult to assemble Xorg. Like > it > would be, I suppose, for KDE. I *like* how you can deal with XFree86 as > one > item. If there was some way to get KDE as one compileable tarball, that > would > be a good thing also. > > <snip> Xorg doesn't fully need to be recompiled it was one giant package until they decided it would be easier for developers to break up the system to smaller ones. For instance lets say x-server 1.6 came out called xorg 7.5 well you will only have to recompile x-server really. Also I went by Xfree86 webpage which states last stable release is from December 2008 before that it was Aug. 2007
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