On Sat, 5 Nov 2011, C. P. Ghost wrote:
On Sat, Nov 5, 2011 at 7:27 AM, James Colannino wrote:
No, I don't mean checking for broken ports :-P In fact, when I Google
around for the answer to my question, that's all I can find, which is why I
bring my question to the mailing list instead :) May
On 11/05/11 12:43, C. P. Ghost wrote:
I'm using the following script (attached).
Thanks for the script. By any chance, are you a Gentoo user (or were
you at one point)? revdep-rebuild, a part of the gentoolkit, is the
first thing I think of when I think about fixing broken packages :)
Ja
On Sat, Nov 5, 2011 at 7:27 AM, James Colannino wrote:
> No, I don't mean checking for broken ports :-P In fact, when I Google
> around for the answer to my question, that's all I can find, which is why I
> bring my question to the mailing list instead :) Maybe "broken ports" or
> "broken packag
On 11/04/11 23:53, Conrad J. Sabatier wrote:
On Fri, 04 Nov 2011 23:27:54 -0700
James Colannino wrote:
What I want to know is, are there tools that will check the ports
I've installed and tell me if any of my packages are linked against
libraries that are no longer there? I'm paranoid that at
On Fri, 04 Nov 2011 23:27:54 -0700
James Colannino wrote:
>
> What I want to know is, are there tools that will check the ports
> I've installed and tell me if any of my packages are linked against
> libraries that are no longer there? I'm paranoid that at some point,
> while I'm building and in
No, I don't mean checking for broken ports :-P In fact, when I Google
around for the answer to my question, that's all I can find, which is
why I bring my question to the mailing list instead :) Maybe "broken
ports" or "broken packages" isn't the right term (what should I be
searching for ins