From owner-freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Sat Sep 19 09:17:19 2015 Return-Path: Delivered-To: freebsd-questions@mailman.ysv.freebsd.org Received: from mx1.freebsd.org (mx1.freebsd.org [IPv6:2001:1900:2254:206a::19:1]) by mailman.ysv.freebsd.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id 47BF79CDC51 for ; Sat, 19 Sep 2015 09:17:19 +0000 (UTC) (envelope-from freebsd@qeng-ho.org) Received: from bede.qeng-ho.org (bede.qeng-ho.org [217.155.128.241]) (using TLSv1.2 with cipher ECDHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384 (256/256 bits)) (Client CN "fileserver.home.qeng-ho.org", Issuer "fileserver.home.qeng-ho.org" (not verified)) by mx1.freebsd.org (Postfix) with ESMTPS id C7F521507 for ; Sat, 19 Sep 2015 09:17:18 +0000 (UTC) (envelope-from freebsd@qeng-ho.org) Received: from arthur.home.qeng-ho.org (arthur.home.qeng-ho.org [172.23.1.2]) by bede.home.qeng-ho.org (8.15.2/8.15.2) with ESMTP id t8J9HD9n012191; Sat, 19 Sep 2015 10:17:14 +0100 (BST) (envelope-from freebsd@qeng-ho.org) Subject: Re: HTTPS on freebsd.org, git, reproducible builds To: =?UTF-8?Q?Dag-Erling_Sm=c3=b8rgrav?= References: <86vbb7dhaa.fsf@nine.des.no> <20150918134804.GU3158@zxy.spb.ru> <86oagzwf8j.fsf@nine.des.no> Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org From: Arthur Chance Message-ID: <55FD2819.6060304@qeng-ho.org> Date: Sat, 19 Sep 2015 10:17:13 +0100 User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; FreeBSD amd64; rv:38.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/38.2.0 MIME-Version: 1.0 In-Reply-To: <86oagzwf8j.fsf@nine.des.no> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8; format=flowed Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit X-BeenThere: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org X-Mailman-Version: 2.1.20 Precedence: list List-Id: User questions List-Unsubscribe: , List-Archive: List-Post: List-Help: List-Subscribe: , X-List-Received-Date: Sat, 19 Sep 2015 09:17:19 -0000 On 18/09/2015 23:10, Dag-Erling Smørgrav wrote: > Slawa Olhovchenkov writes: >> freebsd-update builds is inreproducible by the freebsd-update-server bug[s]. > > freebsd-update will most likely be gone in 11. Obvious question: what might/will replace it? pkg for base? -- Those who do not learn from computing history are doomed to GOTO 1