On Mon, 30 Jun 2008 12:25:26 -0400 "Josh Hanson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> After some very helpful further discussions with Robert, I tried > running "portmanger -u -p -l -y" to re-build everything, with no > success. Further digging established that my pkg_info database was > very confused. (For example, pkg_info reported that cdrtools is > required by xorg-server and lots of x drivers, which it clearly is > not.) > > How it got that bad on such a fresh system is a mystery. I don't know > what I could have done to mess it up. > > On a whim, I tried running "pkgdb -F" and "pkgdb -fU", but it didn't > make anything better. > > Robert suggested that I run pkg_delete -a to start from scratch. I ran > it as an experiment, and it looks like it'd probably work, but as long > as I'm starting from scratch I might as well go all out and reinstall > FreeBSD. I don't yet have any data on this system, so I literally have > nothing to lose, and who knows what else I may have screwed up along > the way? :) Before going that route, update your ports tree. Next, run: portmanager -u -f -l -y That will rebuild your entire system. I did that once and it did correct a lot of problems. The down side is that it will rebuild every port that you have installed and consequently consume a considerable amount of time if you have many ports installed; i.e. open office for instance. Since you have nothing to lose, I would try it out. Before you do it though, clean out all of the 'portmanger' files in the '/tmp' directory to insure that you get a fresh build, and be sure to start with the latest ports updates. -- Gerard [EMAIL PROTECTED] Two wrongs are only the beginning. Kohn
signature.asc
Description: PGP signature