On Thu, October 23, 2008 10:05 pm, Stephen Montgomery-Smith wrote: > Josh Rickmar wrote: > >> I'm hoping that this list covers port tools as well as the usual >> discussions about the actual ports. If not, please CC this to the >> proper list. >> >> I want to use pkg_delete to remove an installed port, but also want to >> remove its orphaned dependencies along with it. After looking at the >> pkg_delete(1) man page, the -r flag seems to be the option to use for >> this job. My concern, though, is about the wording: >> >>> In addition to specified packages, delete all >>> packages that depend on those packages as well. >> >> Does this mean that if I pkg_delete -r pkgA, than pkgB (a dependency) >> will be removed with it, even though it is dependency of pkgC? Or is >> pkg_delete (or pkg_deinstall) smart enough to understand this >> dependency and keep pkgB installed? >> >> If in this scenario pkgB would be deleted, should an extra warning be >> added to the man page so that users know that using this flag could >> potentially break their other ports? > > I think you have the dependency relationship the wrong way around. > > > If you do "pkg_delete -r pkgA", and pkgA is a dependency of pkgB (not > the other way around as you have it), then pkgB will be deleted. >
Ah, my bad. Yeah, after re-reading the wording it seems that is the case. What about for pkg_deinstall (part of portupgrade)? According to its man page, it has two options, --recursive (-r) and --upward-recursive (-R). Maybe it's just a little bit late, but what /exactly/ is the difference? It sounds like the --upward-recursive option would be better called --downward-recursive, since it will remove the ports/packages "below" it. So, if that is the case, would pkg_deinstall -R pkgA remove pkgB or not? -- To send me a personal email, please place [personal] in the Subject line. _______________________________________________ freebsd-ports@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-ports To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"