On Thu, 14 Dec 2006 01:26:04 +0100
Bastiaan Welmers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> You can do "make fetch" to fetch the required package distfiles first,
> or
> "make fetch-recursive" to fetch all the required distfiles of all
> packages required by this package. see "man ports" for other targets.
Chad Gross writes:
> >So what I am asking if is
> anyone has
> >test a Gnome, OpenOffice.org, or any other big installations
> >via ports (say in a Pentium 4 2.8GHz HT with 512Mb RAM) can tell
> >me the elapsed time ??? Just curious...thanks in advan
On 12/13/06, Ne'Bahn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi list, I've read the handbook for ports, basically (if I understand)
ports
are files that brings information (location, dependencies) to the system
to
compile a series of files (sources) to have the final piece of software.
Very nice with the adv
On Wed, Dec 13, 2006 at 07:00:20PM -0500, Ne'Bahn wrote:
> Hi list, I've read the handbook for ports, basically (if I understand)
> ports are files that brings information (location, dependencies) to the
> system to compile a series of files (sources) to have the final piece of
> software. Very
On Wed, Dec 13, 2006 at 07:00:20PM -0500, Ne'Bahn wrote:
> Hi list, I've read the handbook for ports, basically (if I understand)
> ports are files that brings information (location, dependencies) to
> the
> system to compile a series of files (sources) to have the final piece
> of
> software. Very
Hi list, I've read the handbook for ports, basically (if I understand) ports
are files that brings information (location, dependencies) to the system to
compile a series of files (sources) to have the final piece of software.
Very nice with the advantages that comes with this type of installatio