Date: Mon, 06 Mar 2023 04:36:08 +1100 From: Ian Smith <smithi@nimnet.asn.au> To: Dan Langille <dan@langille.org> Cc: Mel Pilgrim <list_freebsd@bluerosetech.com>,questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: How do I determine the ABI string used by pkg? Message-ID: <C238B683-4BBD-46F3-94DA-043ADA8BD2ED@nimnet.asn.au> In-Reply-To: <b3e9f8a6-e91e-e2dc-0bc4-36df118fdffe@langille.org> References: <32d2e376-3f89-0588-316d-801d4cbf0b44@bluerosetech.com> <4DF870F0-89D5-45AA-B66C-93D2D1C0DD5E@nimnet.asn.au> <b3e9f8a6-e91e-e2dc-0bc4-36df118fdffe@langille.org>
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On 6 March 2023 3:03:23 am AEDT, Dan Langille <dan@langille=2Eorg> wrote: > Ian Smith wrote on 3/5/23 12:09 AM: > > On 2 March 2023 6:50:13 pm AEDT, Mel Pilgrim > <list_freebsd@bluerosetech=2Ecom> wrote: > > > I need to determine the ABI string pkg uses on a given system, > and > > > need to do so when there are no pkgs installed=2E > > > > # pkg -N -vv | grep ABI > Will that install pkg "when there are no pkgs installed", the key=20 > requirement of the question? No; using 'pkg -N' when no packages are installed, /usr/sbin/pkg won't att= empt to bootstrap (i=2Ee=2E install pkg*=2Epkg as /usr/local/sbin/pkg) but = -vv still prints, here: ABI =3D "FreeBSD:12:amd64"; ALTABI =3D "FreeBSD:12:x86:64"; cheers, Ian (ports@ removed from ccs)
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