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Date:      Mon, 17 Dec 2001 23:54:49 +0000
From:      George Reid <greid@FreeBSD.org>
To:        Scott Mitchell <scott.mitchell@mail.com>
Cc:        freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.org
Subject:   Re: -STABLE and -CURRENT on the same machine
Message-ID:  <20011217235449.A30023@FreeBSD.org>
In-Reply-To: <20011217232836.B272@localhost>; from scott.mitchell@mail.com on Mon, Dec 17, 2001 at 11:28:36PM %2B0000
References:  <20011217232836.B272@localhost>

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On Mon, Dec 17, 2001 at 11:28:36PM +0000, Scott Mitchell wrote:

> Question, part 1: which partitions is it reasonable to share between these
> two installations?  Obviously /, /usr (and probably /var) need to be kept
> separate, but I can't see any harm in sharing swap and /home.

No harm in sharing swap partitions, /home should be fine (except for 
binaries, see below).  Also bear in mind a bug in the fs code in -CURRENT 
could trash the data on the partition.  Don't keep anything important on 
any machine that's running -CURRENT.

> What about installed ports/packages under /usr/local?  I'd rather not 
> have to install two versions of everything :-(

Tough.  -CURRENT uses a different libc to -STABLE.

> Question, part 2: is my best bet for keeping both installs up-to-date to
> cvsup each separately, into different directories, or to run a local CVS
> repo and just checkout whatever I want to build...disk space is not an
> issue.

If disk space isn't an issue and you have moderate bandwidth (a 56k modem 
would suffice, even), CVS repo is the way to go.  It really doesn't take 
that much longer to update.  I did it quite comfortably on an hourly 
crontab at home from a 28.8k modem.

-- 
George C A Reid			   Tel: (08701) 200870  Ext. 26654
Oriel College, Oxford University        george.reid@oriel.ox.ac.uk
FreeBSD Committer/Developer             greid@FreeBSD.org

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