Date: Sun, 19 Feb 2017 16:04:11 +0100 From: Matthias Andree <matthias.andree@gmx.de> To: freebsd-ports@freebsd.org Subject: Re: The future of portmaster Message-ID: <26956d3b-c91d-fafe-ce2e-0bbdb59e51d2@gmx.de> In-Reply-To: <7d0525ee-980e-a63a-f90f-974a7e1022cf@columbus.rr.com> References: <CAB88xy_RU5TTE=pcsjCWsxWyU-jP91qzD9S-R1v6GKGHJg2=nQ@mail.gmail.com> <945f6d92-6834-7e2c-18c4-0a17e2c04122@columbus.rr.com> <44shneot7h.fsf@lowell-desk.lan> <079d97d0-8dc7-8dcd-460e-86644f12b900@columbus.rr.com> <1244d826-e4ae-97a9-6033-8a1c79c2da9e@m5p.com> <7d0525ee-980e-a63a-f90f-974a7e1022cf@columbus.rr.com>
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Am 16.02.2017 um 21:48 schrieb Baho Utot: > Having built and packaged linux from scratch using the rpm package > manager, I came to find that if one is building packages to be used on > multiple machines, one needs to build each package in a chroot > environment or the package could inherit things from the parent not > found in the target machine. Here by making the package unusable. > We used to have Tinderbox for the purpose, and now we have Poudriere, please use that for your purpose. Portmaster is, by contrast, a tool that focuses on rebuilding a port using, well, the port in the existing system, without building a gazillion of requisite other ports for the chroot first, which easily ends up building some 400 packages when you just want a convenient way to update ONE port, perhaps with a special configuration.
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