Dominic Fandrey píše v pá 03. 04. 2009 v 11:46 +0200: > Pav Lucistnik wrote: > > Dominic Fandrey píše v st 01. 04. 2009 v 00:12 +0200: > > > >>> Upgrades are easy. Look up @comment ORIGIN line in +CONTENTS file of the > >>> port being upgraded, then look up this value in second column of INDEX > >>> file. > >>> > >> I don't see how this is connected to my question. > >> > >> I want people to be able to use LATEST_LINK to identify ports, > >> e.g. apache for www/apache13, apache20 form www/apache20 and so > >> forth. LATEST_LINK is a unique identifier, unfortunately > >> neither recorded in the INDEX nor +CONTENTS. > >> Also, to read it from +CONTENTS (if it were there) I'd have to > >> know, which package is actually meant, which I don't know, > >> because this is the information I want to find out. > > > > Maybe you really want people to specify ports by ORIGIN, not by > > LATEST_LINK ... > > > > Actually I want people to be able to do both. Since this is a > binary package only tool, I want people to be able to use the > same parameters as they'd be able to use with "pkg_add -r". > > I have implemented some guessing by now and it fails very rarely. > But it's not the kind of solution I like.
You could ls -l Latest/ directory on the ftp server and parse the output, but it's a huge hack.. -- Pav Lucistnik <p...@oook.cz> <p...@freebsd.org> Said Helvetica Narrow to Helvetica Bold: "Hey, you're just my type."
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