After having spent a lot time waiting for my ports to build, I'm getting interested in packages. Apparently there is not a package for every port. These commands fail:
pkg_add -r xine pkg_add -r gqview while this one works pkg_add -r subversion Is there an easy way to tell what packages are available? I assume the available packages are a subset of the available ports, probably just the most popular ones. Or are they all supposed to be available? thanks! On 1/23/06, Kevin Kinsey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Xn Nooby wrote: > > > Hi Kevin, > > > > Thank your for the thoughtful reply, I will be going through it > > thoroughly later tonight. One thing that caught my eye was > > something I've never fully understood - the relationship between > > packages and source. I know some people use the precompiled > > packages, especially for big things like KDE and Gnome. If you > > use those packages, and you later rebuild your world - do those > > packages get compiled? It would seem like you could run in to > > conflicts if you had some software that was pre-compiled and > > others that were built from source. I try to always build from > > source to avoid such issues. Or perhaps you install te KDE > > package, but later want to build from source to utilize some > > optimnal compiler settings. > > > > Does FreeBSD rebuild packages when you try to rebuild "everything"? > > > > thanks! > > > > Rebuilding your 3rd party "ports/packages" is a seperate operation. > > If I remember your original mail, you got into that at the very bottom. > "make world" and friends only update the "base system". > > As to the "differences between packages and source", there > aren't many. If you have the ports tree installed, you can find > this out yourself --- cd into something, say /usr/ports/editors/nano, > and type "make package" as root. You'll do exactly what the > FreeBSD package building cluster does, only on a scale of one > instead of 14000+. > > Packages are pre-compiled ports. If you install a current set > of packages when you install FreeBSD, you can then use a > portupgrade-type tool to upgrade them. You can tell the tool > to compile fresh, or to simply fetch new (pre-built) packages. > It's up to you. > > Now, your last 2 sentences are insightful, and a reason to > use "ports" instead of packages after a machine is "up and > running". However, in installation, I'd see little wrong with > using pkg_add to get going more quickly, and then set the > box up to recompile stuff on nights or weekends.... > > KDK > > -- > Dr. Livingston? > Dr. Livingston I. Presume? > > _______________________________________________ [email protected] mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
