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Date:      Sun, 13 Aug 2006 09:12:19 -0400
From:      Randy Pratt <bsd-unix@earthlink.net>
To:        Rene Ladan <r.c.ladan@gmail.com>
Cc:        "\[LoN\]Kamikaze" <LoN_Kamikaze@gmx.de>, freebsd-ports@freebsd.org, Kiffin Gish <kiffin.gish@planet.nl>
Subject:   Re: Skipping certain ports, no upgrade of installed packages ...
Message-ID:  <20060813091219.a2d5377e.bsd-unix@earthlink.net>
In-Reply-To: <44DF0DFF.9000105@gmail.com>
References:  <1155466969.52536.15.camel@localhost> <44DF0843.8010303@gmx.de> <1155467479.52536.20.camel@localhost> <44DF0DFF.9000105@gmail.com>

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On Sun, 13 Aug 2006 13:33:19 +0200
Rene Ladan <r.c.ladan@gmail.com> wrote:

> Kiffin Gish schreef:
> > On Sun, 2006-08-13 at 13:08 +0200, [LoN]Kamikaze wrote:
> >> Kiffin Gish wrote:
> >>> How can prevent a given package from being reinstalled during the next
> >>> portupgrade when I want to delete permanently?
> >>>
> >>> An example is the Galeon browser. Since it also appears in the
> >>> gnome2-fifth-toe makefile t will automatically be rebuilt.
> >>>
> >>> 2nd question: how can I just keep a given version without having it
> >>> upgraded?
> >>>
> >>> Thanks alot in advance.
> >>>
> >> .if ${.CURDIR:M/usr/ports/category/port}
> >> IGNORE=	not wanted
> >> .endif
> >>
> >> This will keep the ports system from building them. But you will have to
> >> edit dependant ports Makefiles. I'm doing that for arts and have to edit
> >> the kdelibs Makefile every time kdelibs gets updated.
> > 
> > The only problem with that approach is that every time I run cvsup the
> > modified makefiles are overwritten.
> > 
> > Can also just delete the dependencies line containing galeon for
> > example, but overwritten by next cvsup.
> > 
> You can also try portsnap, which only overwrites ports which have been
> changed by a commit.

I'm not sure that is true for portsnap under all conditions.  From
the portsnap man page:

  extract   Extract a ports tree, replacing existing files and
            directories.  NOTE: This will remove anything occupying
            the location where files or directories are being
            extracted; in particular, any changes made locally to
            ports tree (for example, adding new patches) will be
            silently obliterated.

The conventional tool, portupgrade, uses /usr/local/etc/pkgtools.conf
to HOLD a package (not upgrade).  The pkgtools.conf.sample file is
well annotated and has many other available options.

Take a look at that and see if it will do the job.

HTH,

Randy


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