Date: Mon, 7 Jan 2002 22:51:24 +0100 From: Grzegorz Czaplinski <gregory@prioris.mini.pw.edu.pl> To: Freddie Cash <fcash@bigfoot.com> Cc: newbies@freebsd.org Subject: Re: cleanning ports Message-ID: <20020107225124.H19828@prioris.mini.pw.edu.pl> In-Reply-To: <3C39A646.23700.2AF89E@localhost>; from fcash@bigfoot.com on Mon, Jan 07, 2002 at 01:44:38PM -0800 References: <20020106190830.S59765-100000@BLAST> <Pine.BSF.4.10.10201071314130.16739-100000@andrsn.stanford.edu> <3C39A646.23700.2AF89E@localhost>
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On Mon, Jan 07, 2002 at 01:44:38PM -0800, Freddie Cash wrote:
> On Sun, 6 Jan 2002, Bernie wrote:
> > if i wanna clean all the obj etc from the ports tree,
> > can i go to /usr/ports and do a 'make clean' ? or do i have
> > to make a script that changes to all subdirs and do 'make clean' on
> > each dir?
>
> Depending on what you want to do, and how much time you want to devote
> to doing it, there are several ways to do this:
>
> 1. Do a 'make clean' from /usr/ports/ and go out for lunch, dinner, and
> a movie. Might be done by the time you get back. :) j/k
>
> 2. Write a shell script to step through all the sub-directories doing
> 'make clean'. This isn't my idea of fun, though, and simply reproduces
> what #1 does.
>
> 3. Write a shell script to delete "/usr/ports/*/*/work/". This should
> be faster than either of the above, and can be extended to delete
> "/usr/ports/distfiles/*".
>
find /usr/ports -type d -name "work" -exec rm -r {}\ ;
should do the job. ;>
[...]
Regards,
gregory
--
Grzegorz Czaplinski <gregory@prioris.mini.pw.edu.pl>
Fingerprint: EB77 E19D CFA2 5736 810F 847C A70F A275 2489 469F
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