On Saturday 25 December 2004 12:29, Jay O'Brien wrote: > But it is there, so it will stay.
I doesn't *have* to stay, though: 1) Add 'WITHOUT_X11="YES"' to /etc/make.conf . 2) Use You can use 'pkg_info -rR xorg-[whatever]' to see which ports depend on a each of the X.org ports. For each "dependent" port, there will be three possible states: 1) You don't use it anymore (eg you used to use Firefox, but haven't in a long time) and no other port depends on it. If this is true, then use pkg_delete to remove that port. 2) You still use it, but don't use the X11 version of it (eg you want to use ImageMagick for automated image processing, but don't need the 'display' command which depends on X.org). In this case, you can rebuild the port and with WITHOUT_X11="YES" setting above will remove its dependency on X.org. 3) You still the X11 version of it. In this case, you won't be removing X.org any time soon. Note that in case #2 above, you don't necessarily have to rebuild it *right now*. A lot of ports are updated regularly and might be updated the next time you run portupgrade anyway. If removing X.org isn't a high priority, then you can always check back every month or so to see when the list of packages that need X11 is small enough that you can force-upgrade them in a reasonably short amount of time. Also note that this general approach works for pretty much any other large system that you might want to remove, not just X.org. -- Kirk Strauser
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