Date: Wed, 30 Oct 1996 06:17:11 -0700 (MST) From: Alan Lundin <aflundi@lundin.abq.nm.us> To: Michael Smith <msmith@atrad.adelaide.edu.au> Cc: current@freebsd.org Subject: Re: 2.1.5r -> current upgrade Message-ID: <199610301317.GAA13054@lundin.abq.nm.us> In-Reply-To: Michael Smith <msmith@atrad.adelaide.edu.au> "Re: 2.1.5r -> current upgrade" (Oct 30, 3:52pm)
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On Oct 30, 3:52pm, Michael Smith wrote: > Subject: Re: 2.1.5r -> current upgrade > > Seriously, yes, you'll want to do that in most cases, but the point I was > making was that all these whines about "upgrading to -current is so hard" > are people making their own trouble, not anything wrong with the tree > per se. Just to lend support to what Michael is saying, I just decided to do exactly that a couple of days ago, and was astonished at how easy it was. That's not to say there aren't snags, like: * being unsure about current, I wanted to have current on one disk, and 2.1.5R on another. It took me a while to discover that only SCSI targets 0 and 1 where bootable from the default BSD boot -- at least with my hardware. * the CVS tree is big, and doing things like "ctm /ctmfiles*" and "cvs co world" take a long time (at least they do on my 486). * "make world" takes a really, really long time! Especially when it stops a few hours into the make complaining that -Tdownps (on a groff command) isn't a supported type. Apparently, something in the "make world" process used the PRINTER env var as a groff output type! In any case, with disk space and time, -current is approachable, just like Michael says. --alan
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