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Date:      Tue, 31 Jan 2006 11:31:02 -0500
From:      Xn Nooby <xnooby@gmail.com>
To:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Standard way of updating 6.x ?
Message-ID:  <bdf25fde0601310831qfda3239j8da895b74868e12@mail.gmail.com>

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Is there a suggested method for updating a newly installed FreeBSD
6.0system?  I have found several websites with similar but differing
methods,
often somehow specific to the author's configuration.  What I usually do
first is install from a CD and get a bare-bones system bootable.  What I
would like to do after that is update the kernel, system programs, user
programs, and packages.  I usually end up using cvsup, portsnap, and
portupgrade with varying levels of success.

What I would really like is a fool-proof method that works everytime, if
there is such a thing.  For example, rebuilding things at the lowest layer
first, and working my way up.  I was following a websites tutorial
yesterday, and was confronted with a "stale imagemagic dependency", where I
chose to "force" an override.  I didn't know if I was doing some wrong or
not, and it seemed to work, but I would rather not have to force anything,
if possible.

Previously I had posted the steps I was using, and several people made
annotations which I was able to integrate, but I was mostly curious if ther=
e
wasn't some standard way. I am trying to use portsnap, since it seems much
faster than cvsup, but the handbook doesn't seem to have portsnap integrate=
d
in to the rebuild steps yet (it is in the appendix I think).

There seems to be updates steps for 4.x and 5.x, but not yet 6.x, or maybe =
I
just have found them yet.  There seems to be a lot of ways to update your
system right now.



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