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Date:      Sun, 27 Feb 2005 23:13:51 +0100
From:      Anthony Atkielski <atkielski.anthony@wanadoo.fr>
To:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Installation instructions for Firefox somewhere?
Message-ID:  <173258071.20050227231351@wanadoo.fr>
In-Reply-To: <20050227210242.M8232@reiteration.net>
References:  <20050226130211.4162005f.albi@scii.nl> <LOBBIFDAGNMAMLGJJCKNEEIMFAAA.tedm@toybox.placo.com> <1262756249.20050226141419@wanadoo.fr> <20050226142726.M5182@reiteration.net> <43908349.20050226154151@wanadoo.fr> <20050227045510.M67328@reiteration.net> <956914133.20050227100144@wanadoo.fr> <20050227210242.M8232@reiteration.net>

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John writes:

> 1. you mentioned that you had the ports tree on another machine. Can you nfs
> mount it?

I pulled all the NFS stuff out of the kernel, alas!

> 2. As others have mentioned, firebird is a fast-moving target. You *need* a
> cvsupped ports in order to keep up with it. So why not install the tree,
> portupgrade whatever rapidly changing applications you need (portupgrade
> -aRr), then rm -rf /usr/ports?

I've never used cvsup or portupgrade or anything like that.

> hmm. I've never used sysinstall for ports stuff apart from the initial
> preparation.. When preparing a machine, I'll install the ports tree, and
> cvsup-without-gui, and that's it. 

I'll have to look into this when time permits.  It seems like a lot of
effort for something that normally isn't done very much on a production
system (presumably one is not constantly installing and deinstalling
software on a production server).

-- 
Anthony




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