Date: Mon, 25 Oct 2004 19:48:55 +0200 From: Roman Kennke <roman@ontographics.com> To: Gary Kline <kline@tao.thought.org> Cc: freebsd-ports@freebsd.org Subject: Re: RELEASE_X_Y_Z branches/tags maintained?? Message-ID: <1098726535.672.4.camel@moonlight> In-Reply-To: <20041025173456.GA95850@thought.org> References: <1098641975.705.10.camel@moonlight> <20041025083705.GA16273@anembo.nu.org> <20041025173456.GA95850@thought.org>
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Am Mo, den 25.10.2004 schrieb Gary Kline um 19:34: > On Mon, Oct 25, 2004 at 11:45:21AM +0200, Roman Kennke wrote: > > Am Mo, den 25.10.2004 schrieb Christopher Vance um 10:37: > > > >> > I have a question regarding the branches/tags of the ports tree for > > > >> > stable releases. Are they in any way maintained. For instance I would > > > >> > like to see security fixes and corrections like changed download URLs be > > > >> > committed there. > > > > > > You have a choice between > > > > > > (1) a system with fewer packages/ports, but each one related to > > > several supported OS versions, > > > > > > or > > > > > > (2) a system with more packages/ports, but they're not tied to any OS version. > > > > > > If you want something like (1) on FreeBSD, you can always capture the > > > ports tree as it was when your OS version was released (it's even > > > tagged for you) and update only those parts you care about. You get > > > to follow any advisories yourself (try portaudit). But if it breaks, > > > you get to fix all the pieces yourself. > > > > Maybe, if there is _enough_ interest, somebody (starting with me??) > > could start a separate (from FreeBSD) project, that aims to maintain a > > stable FreeBSD ports tree. It could start out with a subset of ports, > > architectures and OS versions for the beginning, and scale when > > resources are available. It could occasionally grab a tagged ports tree > > and develop a stable version out of it. > > > > What do you think? > > > I think your idea has lots of merit, Roman--to stick my > two cents' worth in. Porting isn't that hard once you've > found and fixed <<whatever>> problems. Most bugs aren't that > hard to fix; some are bloody murder. After that, to create > a port for FBSD is a lot of grungy detail work. For > example, creating the patch files, then the new > distfiles and the ancillary files that make certain > that everything Just-Works{tm}. yeah I know, I have created a _few_ ports myself. > Once you've done a few ports--either your own hacking > or someone else's--creating a port gets pretty easy. > Takes a few hours/port/architecture. Before aiming for > a separate project, it may pay to work within the ports > group for awhile. I'm just thinking over some ideas. Another idea is to go with NetBSDs pkgsrc instead, they also support FreeBSD and have a stable branch (although this needs some work to be maintained). The wheel hasn't to be reinvented X times ;-) /Roman
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