Just to sum it up for the archives Conrad Sabatier wrote: > > On 07-Nov-2002 Lefteris Tsintjelis wrote: > > Hi, > > > > I have acrually a few questions: > > > > 1) How can I find ports that do not depend in any other ports? > > pkg_info -ar
Or, a very nice port (/usr/ports/sysutils/pkg_tree) I just found. It does the same job with better on screen results. It can even display dependencies of the dependencies in a nice graphical tree. pkg_tree -v > > 2) How can I find files that are unused by any port? > > /usr/ports/Tools/scripts/check_consistency I think /usr/ports/Tools/scripts/consistency-check examines modified files within /usr/local/bin only. > or > > pkg_which file(s) A better way to examine files in any path would be to use pkg_which -v Something like "find <PATH PATH ...> -type f | xargs pkg_which -v | fgrep '?'" would check against any port in any path. > > 3) How can I find modified files? > > pkg_info -ag > > > 4) How can I find missing port files? > > Need some clarification as to what you mean. I think your previous answer covers this one as well. I meant if any of the already installed port files are missing. "pkg_info -ag" displays results of any modified/missing port files. Is there a way to also check the system (/bin /sbin ...) for modified/missing/extra files? > > 5) _AND_ (yes finally) How can I find missing port dependencies? > > pkg_info -I $(pkg_info -arq | cut -d ' ' -f 2) I am not sure here if the results are any missing port dependencies. I get a multiple list of the ports that are already installed. Thanks, Lefteris > -- > Conrad Sabatier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with "unsubscribe freebsd-questions" in the body of the message