Date: Sun, 12 Jul 2015 17:44:39 -0400 From: Derek Schrock <dereks@lifeofadishwasher.com> To: Dan Busarow <dan@buildingonline.com> Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: freebsd-update and whatis Message-ID: <20150712214439.GA25794@ircbsd> In-Reply-To: <55A273D9.5080108@buildingonline.com> References: <20150712130057.45FA6BCFE10@alisocreek.buildingonline.net> <55A273D9.5080108@buildingonline.com>
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Ran in the same problem and if anyone disagrees please correct me this is all based off my observations. Your whatis database file is being rebuilt on a weekly basis and your system has some third party or orphaned base files. /etc/periodic/weekly/320.whatis is ran on a weekly basis: $ fgrep weekly /etc/crontab # Perform daily/weekly/monthly maintenance. 15 4 * * 6 root periodic weekly You can see this by running freebsd-update, 320.whatis, then freebsd-update again: # freebsd-update fetch Looking up update.FreeBSD.org mirrors... 5 mirrors found. Fetching metadata signature for 10.1-RELEASE from update5.freebsd.org... done. Fetching metadata index... done. Inspecting system... done. Preparing to download files... done. The following files will be updated as part of updating to 10.1-RELEASE-p14: /usr/share/man/whatis # freebsd-update install Installing updates... done. # freebsd-update fetch Looking up update.FreeBSD.org mirrors... 5 mirrors found. Fetching metadata signature for 10.1-RELEASE from update5.freebsd.org... done. Fetching metadata index... done. Inspecting system... done. Preparing to download files... done. No updates needed to update system to 10.1-RELEASE-p14. # /etc/periodic/weekly/320.whatis Rebuilding whatis database: # freebsd-update fetch Looking up update.FreeBSD.org mirrors... 5 mirrors found. Fetching metadata signature for 10.1-RELEASE from update6.freebsd.org... done. Fetching metadata index... done. Inspecting system... done. Preparing to download files... done. The following files will be updated as part of updating to 10.1-RELEASE-p14: /usr/share/man/whatis But why is your base not in sync with the environment that builds the freebsd-update binaries? When you run freebsd-update there's a possibility that between updates (more likely between major updates) there's a chance old files were removed. These could be libs, include, binaries, man pages (in this case). ex: Upgrade from 9.X to 10.X pkg_* was removed including the binaries, support, and man files among other things that changed in 9->10. I haven't tested this yet however freebsd-update.conf does have an option: AllowDelete The single parameter following this keyword must be ``yes'' or ``no'' and specifies whether freebsd-update is allowed to delete files, directories, and symlinks as part of updates downloaded. I don't know if this cleans the no older used/orphaned files it doesn't appear to retroactively clean up if you've had it off. I believe another option is to use /usr/src/Makefile if you have /usr/src (or a checked out source tree). I don't know if using github.com/freebsd/freebsd/ releng/10.1 or stable/10 branch is correct. Using a system installed /usr/src that's updated via freebsd-update might be the correct way to go. ex: $ fgrep delete-old Makefile # delete-old - Delete obsolete directories/files. # delete-old-dirs - Delete obsolete directories. # delete-old-files - Delete obsolete files. # delete-old-libs - Delete obsolete libraries. # 9. `make delete-old' # 11. `make delete-old-libs' (in case no 3rd party program uses them # anymore) delete-old delete-old-dirs delete-old-files delete-old-libs \ # git branch master releng/10.1 * stable/10 # make delete-old >>> Removing old files (only deletes safe to delete libs) remove /usr/share/man/man9/NDHASGIANT.9.gz? ..... I would like to know the best way to clean up old/orphaned base files. - freebsd-update (but then how do you clean up from previous updates when you had AllowDelete set to the default value no?). - /usr/src/Makefile # make -C /usr/src/ delete-old # delete-old{,-dirs,-files,-libs) I believe the only risk here is if you delete a lib that's still being used by a third party utility - or some other method I didn't mention. Parsing INDEX files from freebsd-update server might be an option however very risky. Side note: It appears there was once a handbook article for delete-old and delete-old-{dirs,files,libs} however it was removed. Should it return? On Sun, Jul 12, 2015 at 08:04:09AM -0600, Dan Busarow wrote: > I have 9 servers running 9.3-RELEASE p19 > > They are all pretty much identical at the / and /usr level with > differences in /usr/local > > On two of these servers, freebsd-update keeps updating > /usr/share/man/whatis after periodic weekly updates whatis > > The other 7 don't care. > > I know I can add /usr/share/man/whatis to freebsd-update.com IgnorePaths > > But.. what I'd really like to know is what may have triggered this > behavior only on two out of 9 servers? > > Thanks, > Dan > > > -------- Forwarded Message -------- > Subject: alisocreek.buildingonline.net security updates > Date: Sun, 12 Jul 2015 06:00:57 -0700 (PDT) > From: Charlie Root <root@buildingonline.net> > To: root@buildingonline.net > > Looking up update.FreeBSD.org mirrors... none found. > Fetching metadata signature for 9.3-RELEASE from update.FreeBSD.org... done. > Fetching metadata index... done. > Inspecting system... done. > Preparing to download files... done. > > The following files will be updated as part of updating to 9.3-RELEASE-p19: > /usr/share/man/whatis > > > _______________________________________________ > freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list > http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions > To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscribe@freebsd.org"
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