> Q: I want to use this cool piece of software that's in the FreeBSD
> ports system. But I can't build it on my 3.x-stable system.
>
> Why not?
A. Likely because someone running only on a -current box last committed
a change to the port which broke it with 3.x. Please submit a bug
report on this with send-pr since the -current ports collection is supposed
to work with both the -current and -stable branches. If you're running a
release version that lags significantly behind -current or -stable, you
will require a ports upgrade kit from http://www.freebsd.org/ports
- Jordan
>
> A: Ah, sorry. The ports system only targets -current, trying to get
> it to work with -stable is too much work. If you want to be sure
> of using the ports system successfully you need to be running
> -current.
> </advocate>
>
> Or was this policy reversed recently and I didn't notice (always a
> likely possibility).
>
> [ And yes, I *know* the ports system relies on volunteers, and that if
> people can't be bothered to test their ports on a -stable system then
> there's not a lot we can do about it. But this does lead to the
> amusing situation (for various values of "amusing") where on one hand
> we're telling people not to use -current unless they really know what
> they're doing, but on the other hand we're (in some cases) preventing
> them from using a major piece of FreeBSD infrastructure which is
> expressly designed to make life easier for exactly the sort of people
> who should be running -stable. ]
>
> N
> --
> [intentional self-reference] can be easily accommodated using a blessed,
> non-self-referential dummy head-node whose own object destructor severs
> the links.
> -- Tom Christiansen in <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
>
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