On Sun, Apr 27, 2008 at 8:33 PM, Mark Knecht <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Sat, Apr 26, 2008 at 1:00 PM, Alan McKinnon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > wrote: > > On Saturday 26 April 2008, Mark Knecht wrote: > (...) > > > default so it's really slow). I'm thinking of these things: > > > > - Install every currently installed ebuild to an overlay, or install > > specific ebuilds or specific categories to an overlay. > > - Copy an installed ebuild and it's entire installed DEPEND tree to an > > overlay - this is for cases where <arb_lib> is not in world but is > > required as a deep dependency of something that is. The user will > > probably not be aware of this dependency and not having that ebuild > > will break stuff. > It hasn't been mentioned yet, but ebuilds of all installed packages can be found in /var/db/pkg/<category>/<pkg>-<ver>/<pkg>-<ver>.ebuild. emerge --sync can mess around with /usr/portage all it wants, your ebuilds will still be there until you unmerge the package. Right? > > - Copy an entire profile to an overlay > Could one integrate that with eselect profile? How about copying the current profile to /var/db/profile? > > > - Copy everything in an installed ebuild's SRC_URI (or all installed > > ebuilds) to a different DISTDIR for safety (think ATI driver downloads > > or kernels here) > > > > - Remove old ebuilds and profiles from the overlay that you have since > > upgraded > > - Possibly more > > > (...) > > Here's my idea: How hard would it be to have eix-test-obsolete > verify against the global database instead of the local database? If I > ran it that way *before* I ran emerge --sync then it would tell me > effectively which packages would be removed after syncing. I could > then move what I need to move by hand, run emerge --sync, and I'd > still be clean because I've saved my files into my private overlay > before the sync operation can delete them. This is about losing ebuilds? See comment about /var/db/pkg/... > > > If an enhancement like that is fairly simple - I have no idea - > then that would be a great start. Still, it's not protection against > the root cause of the problem, but it's a simple way to see ahead of > time what might happen. > > Cheers, > Mark > ~Henry