Date: Mon, 22 Nov 2004 01:28:47 -0600 From: "Kevin D. Kinsey, DaleCo, S.P." <kdk@daleco.biz> To: questions@freebsd.org Subject: Can "make rerelease" go backwards? Message-ID: <41A1952F.1010108@daleco.biz>
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I recently tried something new ... built my own release with what I (naively || <stupidly?>) thought would be RELENG_5_3 sources. I'm hoping to use this "release server" to set up boxes for the foreseeable future, so I really want 5.3-RELEASE. It was a neat experience, not so hard as it seemed at first, and it was tre kewl to watch FreeBSD install via FTP over a LAN .... However, in setting only the three variables required, with CVSROOT equal to: freebsdanoncvs@anoncvs.freebsd.org:/home/ncvs, I ended up with 6.X-CURRENT sources, as I'm sure that anyone familiar with the process could easily have foreseen (I guess I thought that somehow BUILDNAME might have something to do with it, besides the obvious). If I set CVSCMDARGS to the time that 5.3-RELEASE was tagged, will a "make rerelease" do the equivalent of "turning back the clock" without having to clean out the source tree, etc? I had to move a box from here to the colo (and then back again) to get enough bw to do the job (after 3 unsuccessful tries from here) and would really like to do the job with minimal "pull" from the 'Net if possible .... Anyone have a recommendation? Or is it "back to the colo" and "make release" again? Thank you! Kevin Kinsey
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