On Thu, Feb 18, 2010 at 12:48 AM, Dan Ports wrote:
> I don't know what's going on with your gnucash-docs problem (sounds
> like it's a problem with xulrunner, though)
Thanks. Yes, I think xulrunner seems missing or not working. Hard for me to
see how to solve that. But as you will read in a bit
On Feb 17, 2010, at 20:28, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
> I can't get bzip2 to build for i386 right now; it has an error while building
> and I appear to have a bug in the portfile. I'll see what I can do.
False alarm; local problem on my system. bzip2 should build fine in any case.
But you may still f
On 18 February 2010 05:53, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
> On Feb 17, 2010, at 23:14, Sam Kuper wrote:
>
> > I guess it would be good to alert the port maintainers for Inkscape and
> Boost to this thread. Trouble is, I'm not sure how to do that.
>
> "port info boost" tells you who maintains boost.
>
Thank
On Feb 17, 2010, at 23:14, Sam Kuper wrote:
> I guess it would be good to alert the port maintainers for Inkscape and Boost
> to this thread. Trouble is, I'm not sure how to do that.
"port info boost" tells you who maintains boost.
> I can't see email addresses for them on either the MacPorts
On 18 February 2010 03:20, ~suv wrote:
> On 18/2/10 03:29, Sam Kuper wrote:
> > On 18/2/10 02:53, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
> >> On Feb 17, 2010, at 17:31, Sam Kuper wrote:
> >>> On 17 February 2010 22:38, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
> >>>
> Yes, this is normal. I was surprised by this too last time I
> >
On 18 February 2010 02:44, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
> On Feb 17, 2010, at 20:29, Sam Kuper wrote: [...]
> > I guess a better solution would be to somehow have MacPorts or
> port_cutleaves be aware of which ports had had their installation requested
> by a user, and to have port_cutleaves have the opti
On 18/2/10 03:29, Sam Kuper wrote:
> On 18/2/10 02:53, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
>> On Feb 17, 2010, at 17:31, Sam Kuper wrote:
>>> On 17 February 2010 22:38, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
>>>
Yes, this is normal. I was surprised by this too last time I
upgraded boost, but boost seems to need about 5-6G
I know at least two other users contacted me off list to tell me they are
getting these, anyone else? I brought this up the other day, off list, with a
different email recipient, but it is still happening as of late. It looks like
ehai...@laposte.net needs to be purged from the MP lists.
This
On Feb 17, 2010, at 21:03, Scott Haneda wrote:
> On Feb 17, 2010, at 6:59 PM, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
>
>> set completion-ignore-case on
>>
>> "\e[A": history-search-backward
>
> And that is in ~/.inputrc or some other file?
Yes.
> Any reason you do not have the "forward" counterpart?
Probably
On Feb 17, 2010, at 6:59 PM, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
>
> On Feb 17, 2010, at 20:57, Scott Haneda wrote:
>
>> On Feb 17, 2010, at 6:25 PM, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
>>
>>> But I've configured my bash to do as you say, which lets me type, say,
>>> "svn" and then press the up arrow to see the previous comm
On Feb 17, 2010, at 20:57, Scott Haneda wrote:
> On Feb 17, 2010, at 6:25 PM, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
>
>> But I've configured my bash to do as you say, which lets me type, say, "svn"
>> and then press the up arrow to see the previous command that started with
>> "svn". However, I don't remember h
On Feb 17, 2010, at 6:25 PM, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
On Feb 17, 2010, at 17:29, Marko Käning wrote:
I might be confused right now about the tab history completion.
(Have to check again its exact behaviour on my linux laptop - when
I feel the need to start it up again.) :)
BUT, the history co
On Feb 17, 2010, at 6:25 PM, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
> But I've configured my bash to do as you say, which lets me type, say, "svn"
> and then press the up arrow to see the previous command that started with
> "svn". However, I don't remember how I did that (it was years ago) and I
> can't find any
On Feb 17, 2010, at 20:29, Sam Kuper wrote:
> Maybe so. I wasn't aware of boost before it made my Mac fall over, so I can't
> claim any intimate knowledge of it. My gut instinct, though, is that
> especially for packages handled by a package manager and intended to provide
> limited functionali
On Feb 17, 2010, at 17:03, Johannes Behr wrote:
> I just try to install the boost lib on my fresh 32-bit macports installation
> and it always fails:
You're not seeing the first error. Use the debug switch to see all output.
sudo port -d install boost
I expect you'll see a line saying that some
On 18 February 2010 01:53, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
> On Feb 17, 2010, at 17:31, Sam Kuper wrote:
> > On 17 February 2010 22:38, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
> >> Yes, this is normal. I was surprised by this too last time I upgraded
> boost, but boost seems to need about 5-6GB free hard drive space to build
>
On Feb 17, 2010, at 17:29, Marko Käning wrote:
> I might be confused right now about the tab history completion. (Have to
> check again its exact behaviour on my linux laptop - when I feel the need to
> start it up again.) :)
>
> BUT, the history completion with page up and down works differen
On Feb 17, 2010, at 18:51, Sam Kuper wrote:
> In other words, given a leaf I no longer want to keep installed, is there way
> to remove it and everything below it on the dependency graph back to the
> first branch that leads to another leaf?
You want the port_cutleaves program.
sudo port inst
On Feb 17, 2010, at 17:31, Sam Kuper wrote:
> On 17 February 2010 22:38, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
>
>> Yes, this is normal. I was surprised by this too last time I upgraded boost,
>> but boost seems to need about 5-6GB free hard drive space to build and
>> install. After it's all built and installed
On Feb 17, 2010, at 17:54, Daniel J. Luke wrote:
> On Feb 17, 2010, at 6:40 PM, Sam Kuper wrote:
>> Should I be worried that these swapfiles don't match the pattern you've
>> described?
>
> Probably not, perhaps things are set up differently for laptops.
>
> The swap file generation is handled
On 2010-2-18 04:32 , Jurgen Sidgman wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Does any one know why the following lines in my .bash_profile would impair
> the functioning of ports?
>
> export CLICOLOR=1
> export LSCOLORS=ExFxCxDxBxegedabagacad
>
> I just created the bash_profile to give some coloring to my shell. I use
On 17 February 2010 23:46, Sam Kuper wrote:
> Suppose I install two ports, CC and DD. Suppose also that CC depends only
> on AA and on BB, and that DD depends only on AA.
>
Maybe I should clarify that a bit.
If, on a clean system, I run "sudo port install CC" and then "sudo port
install DD", I
CTRL+R searches backwards. It works!!! Great.
BUT, how to I search forward again, once I scrolled a bit too deep into history?
___
macports-users mailing list
macports-users@lists.macosforge.org
http://lists.macosforge.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/macport
On Feb 17, 2010, at 3:46 PM, Scott Haneda wrote:
Marko, your server is rejecting messages from me, based on content:
Here are the details: http://pastie.org/829949
--
Scott * If you contact me off list replace talklists@ with scott@ *
Me too.
// Brad
On Wed, Feb 17, 2010 at 15:57, Sam Kuper wrote:
>
> port installed | sed 's/ (active)//g' | xargs -0 port dependents
As has already been posted, port_cutleaves is probably a better
solution. But here's the correct xargs syntax anyway.
port installed | sed 's/ (active)//g;s/@.*//;s/ //g' | gxarg
On Feb 17, 2010, at 6:40 PM, Sam Kuper wrote:
> Should I be worried that these swapfiles don't match the pattern you've
> described?
Probably not, perhaps things are set up differently for laptops.
The swap file generation is handled by dynamic_pager which by default makes
subsequent files larg
Marko, your server is rejecting messages from me, based on content:
Here are the details: http://pastie.org/829949
--
Scott * If you contact me off list replace talklists@ with scott@ *
___
macports-users mailing list
macports-users@lists.macosforge.o
Dear all,
Suppose I install two ports, CC and DD. Suppose also that CC depends only on
AA and on BB, and that DD depends only on AA.
Is there a way to uninstall CC such that BB automatically gets uninstalled
too, but AA is left intact because it is depended upon by DD?
Many thanks in advance,
S
On 17 February 2010 22:54, Daniel J. Luke wrote:
> On Feb 17, 2010, at 5:41 PM, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
> > Sounds pretty normal to me. 67108864 bytes is 64MB; a dozen of them is
> 768MB.
>
> Except that they won't all be 64MB, the first two will be, the next will be
> 128MB the next 256MB, then 512M
On Feb 17, 2010, at 3:29 PM, Marko Käning wrote:
> Well, Bradley and Ryan,
>
> I might be confused right now about the tab history completion. (Have to
> check again its exact behaviour on my linux laptop - when I feel the need to
> start it up again.) :)
>
> BUT, the history completion with p
On 17 February 2010 22:41, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
>
> On Feb 17, 2010, at 09:55, Sam Kuper wrote:
>
> > Now, I've just had a look in /var/vm . It contains a dozen swapfiles of
> 67108864 bytes each, plus a sleepimage file of 2147483648 bytes. I've no
> idea whether this is normal or not, though: I'v
On 17 February 2010 22:38, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
> On Feb 17, 2010, at 08:59, Sam Kuper wrote:
>
> > I just ran "sudo port -f -p clean --all all", which completed OK as far
> as I can tell, and then "sudo port upgrade outdated". The latter command has
> got as far as "---> Building boost" but seems
Well, Bradley and Ryan,
I might be confused right now about the tab history completion. (Have to check
again its exact behaviour on my linux laptop - when I feel the need to start it
up again.) :)
BUT, the history completion with page up and down works differently to what
arrow up and down do.
Hi,
I just try to install the boost lib on my fresh 32-bit macports installation
and it always fails:
--
---> Computing dependencies for boost
---> Building boost
Error: Target org.macports.build returned: shell command " cd
"/opt/local/var/macports/build/_opt_local_var_macport
On 17 February 2010 21:35, Marko Käning wrote:
> What about using the port "port_cutleaves" with option "-l"?
>
Aha! I didn't know about port_cutleaves. Thank you! It looks like
"port_cutleaves -l" should indeed give me just a list of leaves: exactly
what I was looking for :)
Thanks again,
Sam
On Feb 17, 2010, at 5:41 PM, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
> Sounds pretty normal to me. 67108864 bytes is 64MB; a dozen of them is 768MB.
Except that they won't all be 64MB, the first two will be, the next will be
128MB the next 256MB, then 512MB then the rest will be 1.0GB (at least, I
haven't seen more
On Feb 17, 2010, at 16:36, Bradley Giesbrecht wrote:
> On Feb 17, 2010, at 2:32 PM, Marko Käning wrote:
>
>>
>> From my linux bash I am used to have history completion (using pageup and
>> pagedown one can scroll through command history, tab completes formerly
>> executed commands for me).
>>
On Feb 17, 2010, at 11:34, Randal L. Schwartz wrote:
> The problem with OSX's "add swap files as necessary" strategy is that
> it seems like it never clears them back out, unless the moon is full
> on a Tuesday, or something.
Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger and earlier had some trouble clearing out swapfiles
On Feb 17, 2010, at 10:03, Sam Kuper wrote:
> Is there a command to show which ports depend on boost? The reason I ask is
> that if the ports that depend on boost are ones I can live without or can
> find .dmg files for, then I'd prefer to skip boost altogether than to
> troubleshoot its build
On Feb 17, 2010, at 09:55, Sam Kuper wrote:
> Now, I've just had a look in /var/vm . It contains a dozen swapfiles of
> 67108864 bytes each, plus a sleepimage file of 2147483648 bytes. I've no idea
> whether this is normal or not, though: I've never looked in that directory
> before.
Sounds p
On Feb 17, 2010, at 2:32 PM, Marko Käning wrote:
From my linux bash I am used to have history completion (using
pageup and pagedown one can scroll through command history, tab
completes formerly executed commands for me).
How can this be achieved for my iMac's bash? (Perhaps it's not even
On Feb 17, 2010, at 09:23, Sam Kuper wrote:
> The latter command has got as far as "---> Building boost" but seems now to
> be stuck there and is now simply eating hard drive space. I had 3.03GB free
> hard disk space when I ran the command, and now, 20 minutes later, have only
> 1.09GB free a
On Feb 17, 2010, at 08:59, Sam Kuper wrote:
> I just ran "sudo port -f -p clean --all all", which completed OK as far as I
> can tell, and then "sudo port upgrade outdated". The latter command has got
> as far as "---> Building boost" but seems now to be stuck there and is now
> simply eating h
>From my linux bash I am used to have history completion (using pageup and
>pagedown one can scroll through command history, tab completes formerly
>executed commands for me).
How can this be achieved for my iMac's bash? (Perhaps it's not even a MacPorts
issue...)
__
On Feb 17, 2010, at 11:09 AM, Bradley Giesbrecht wrote:
> Memory guidelines from Apple at the time of purchase seem to have more to do
> with the capacity of memory modules at the time of system build. I can not
> recall Apple ever claiming a memory capacity in a system spec greater then
> stuf
On Feb 17, 2010, at 9:57 AM, Bradley Giesbrecht wrote:
> Isn't there a 4GB kit for you MBP?
>
> http://www.18004memory.com/apple-macbook-pro.asp
I think you can put in 4, but only address 3.
--
Scott * If you contact me off list replace talklists@ with scott@ *
___
On Feb 17, 2010, at 9:32 AM, Jurgen Sidgman wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Does any one know why the following lines in my .bash_profile would impair
> the functioning of ports?
>
> export CLICOLOR=1
> export LSCOLORS=ExFxCxDxBxegedabagacad
>
> I just created the bash_profile to give some coloring to my she
On Feb 13, 2010, at 6:53 PM, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
> Actually, the default compiler architecture (x86_64 on Snow Leopard and up,
> i386 on Leopard and below) is hardcoded into the gcc compiler provided by
> Xcode. That is the architecture it will use, unless you specify -arch flags
> to tell it o
I don't know what's going on with your gnucash-docs problem (sounds
like it's a problem with xulrunner, though) -- but in answer to your
other questions:
On Wed, Feb 17, 2010 at 05:20:20PM +0300, Jasper Frumau wrote:
> GNUCash itself installed well. It took a long time though. Felt like I was
> in
What about using the port "port_cutleaves" with option "-l"?
___
macports-users mailing list
macports-users@lists.macosforge.org
http://lists.macosforge.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/macports-users
On 17 February 2010 20:37, Jochen Küpper wrote:
> On 17.02.2010, at 19:43, Randal L. Schwartz wrote:
>
> >> "Bradley" == Bradley Giesbrecht writes:
> >
> > Bradley> Isn't there a 4GB kit for you MBP?
> >
> > Bradley> http://www.18004memory.com/apple-macbook-pro.asp
> >
> > Might be a third-pa
Dear all,
I want to obtain a list of all the installed ports which have no dependents,
so that I can keep the ones I need and uninstall the rest. I'm trying to do
this via the following command:
port installed | sed 's/ (active)//g' | xargs -0 port dependents
However, this isn't working quite as
On 17.02.2010, at 19:43, Randal L. Schwartz wrote:
>> "Bradley" == Bradley Giesbrecht writes:
>
> Bradley> Isn't there a 4GB kit for you MBP?
>
> Bradley> http://www.18004memory.com/apple-macbook-pro.asp
>
> Might be a third-party kit, but as far as I recall, Apple didn't promise
> suitabi
On Feb 17, 2010, at 11:31 AM, li...@mgreg.com wrote:
Hi All,
I'm having a bit of trouble with a port install of NSIS 2.45.
Basically the install itself seems to occur without error, however
there doesn't seem to be any executable or documentation installed
anywhere. Are there any extra
Hi All,
I'm having a bit of trouble with a port install of NSIS 2.45. Basically the
install itself seems to occur without error, however there doesn't seem to be
any executable or documentation installed anywhere. Are there any extra steps
to perform after "sudo port install nsis"?
System S
On Feb 17, 2010, at 10:43 AM, Randal L. Schwartz wrote:
"Bradley" == Bradley Giesbrecht writes:
Bradley> Isn't there a 4GB kit for you MBP?
Bradley> http://www.18004memory.com/apple-macbook-pro.asp
Might be a third-party kit, but as far as I recall, Apple didn't
promise
suitability for m
On 17.02.2010, at 18:54, Randal L. Schwartz wrote:
>> "Jochen" == Jochen Küpper writes:
>
> Jochen> On 17.02.2010, at 18:34, Randal L. Schwartz wrote:
>>> I've now taken to watching the swap size on my laptop (using iStatMenus),
>>> and
>>> if it ever gets above 2GB total, I just reboot, be
> "Bradley" == Bradley Giesbrecht writes:
Bradley> Isn't there a 4GB kit for you MBP?
Bradley> http://www.18004memory.com/apple-macbook-pro.asp
Might be a third-party kit, but as far as I recall, Apple didn't promise
suitability for more than 3GB in this model, and I don't want to run the r
On Feb 17, 2010, at 10:17 AM, Sam Kuper wrote:
On 17 February 2010 17:45, Bradley Giesbrecht
wrote:
On Feb 17, 2010, at 7:55 AM, Sam Kuper wrote:
On 17 February 2010 15:33, Daniel J. Luke wrote:
On Feb 17, 2010, at 10:23 AM, Sam Kuper wrote:
> On 17 February 2010 14:59, Sam Kuper wrote:
>
On 17 Feb 2010, at 19:14, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
>
> On Feb 17, 2010, at 12:00, Johannes Behr wrote:
>
>> So I uninstalled macports all together and started from scratch
>>
>> 1) installed macports pkgs
>> 2) build_arch to i386 in macports.conf
>> 3) "port install" all package i need
>>
>> Sho
On Feb 17, 2010, at 12:00, Johannes Behr wrote:
> So I uninstalled macports all together and started from scratch
>
> 1) installed macports pkgs
> 2) build_arch to i386 in macports.conf
> 3) "port install" all package i need
>
> Should this work ?
This should work, for ports that know how to
On Feb 17, 2010, at 06:26, Scott C. Kennedy wrote:
> You can do the following to uninstall/re-install all ports...
>
> 1: port installed > installed_ports
> 2: port uninstall -f installed
> 3: for PORT_TO_INSTALL in `awk '{print $1}' installed_ports`; do port
> install $PORT_TO_INSTALL ; done
>
On Feb 17, 2010, at 05:52, Johannes Behr wrote:
>> If that's the way you want to go, I would recommend you uninstall all ports.
>> Then change build_arch and reinstall the ports you need. However:
>
> How do I uninstall all ports ?
sudo port -f uninstall installed
>> Perhaps you would be hap
> "Sam" == Sam Kuper writes:
Sam> Thanks for the tip, Randal. I've now installed iStat Menus, following
Sam> your suggestion. Pity there isn't a way to show the swap size on the
Sam> menubar directly, but clicking on the MEM icon is handy enough. Currently
Sam> running at 508MB, which doesn't
So I uninstalled macports all together and started from scratch
1) installed macports pkgs
2) build_arch to i386 in macports.conf
3) "port install" all package i need
Should this work ?
regards
johannes
> thanks
> johannes
>
> On 17 Feb 2010, at 13:26, Scott C. Kennedy wrote:
>
>> You ca
On Feb 17, 2010, at 9:54 AM, Randal L. Schwartz wrote:
"Jochen" == Jochen Küpper writes:
Jochen> On 17.02.2010, at 18:34, Randal L. Schwartz wrote:
I've now taken to watching the swap size on my laptop (using
iStatMenus), and
if it ever gets above 2GB total, I just reboot, because at that
> "Jochen" == Jochen Küpper writes:
Jochen> On 17.02.2010, at 18:34, Randal L. Schwartz wrote:
>> I've now taken to watching the swap size on my laptop (using iStatMenus), and
>> if it ever gets above 2GB total, I just reboot, because at that point,
>> everything is gonna be gummy, and that s
On 17.02.2010, at 18:34, Randal L. Schwartz wrote:
> I've now taken to watching the swap size on my laptop (using iStatMenus), and
> if it ever gets above 2GB total, I just reboot, because at that point,
> everything is gonna be gummy, and that seems to be the only way to clear it.
Hmm, I cannot
> "Sam" == Sam Kuper writes:
Sam> Now, I've just had a look in /var/vm . It contains a dozen swapfiles of
Sam> 67108864 bytes each, plus a sleepimage file of 2147483648 bytes. I've no
Sam> idea whether this is normal or not, though: I've never looked in that
Sam> directory before.
The proble
Hi,
Does any one know why the following lines in my .bash_profile would impair the
functioning of ports?
export CLICOLOR=1
export LSCOLORS=ExFxCxDxBxegedabagacad
I just created the bash_profile to give some coloring to my shell. I used only
the lines above. Immediately my macports installation
On Feb 17, 2010, at 8:03 AM, Sam Kuper wrote:
> Is there a command to show which ports depend on boost? The reason I ask is
> that if the ports that depend on boost are ones I can live without or can
> find .dmg files for, then I'd prefer to skip boost altogether than to
> troubleshoot its buil
Am 20.11.2009 um 09:12 schrieb Ryan Schmidt:
>>
>> I used port to install transmission and then have been updating from
>> within Transmission since then.
>
> In-app auto-update is not an appropriate feature for software installed with
> MacPorts ("port upgrade" is the only way we want users u
On 17 February 2010 16:18, Sam Kuper wrote:
> The command "sudo port uninstall --follow-dependents boost" yields the
> following:
>
>
> ---> The following versions of gimp2 are currently installed:
> ---> gimp2 @2.6.6_1+darwin_9+x11
> ---> gimp2 @2.6.6_2+darwin_9+x11 (active)
> Error:
On 17 February 2010 16:11, Sam Kuper wrote:
> On 17 February 2010 16:03, Sam Kuper wrote:
>
>> Is there a command to show which ports depend on boost?
>>
>
> I think I've got it: "port dependents boost"
>
> This gives:
>
> "libopenraw depends on boost
> inkscape depends on boost"
>
> Now I know
On 17 February 2010 16:03, Sam Kuper wrote:
> Is there a command to show which ports depend on boost?
>
I think I've got it: "port dependents boost"
This gives:
"libopenraw depends on boost
inkscape depends on boost"
Now I know there's a dmg for inkscape. As for libopenraw, the only thing
ult
On 17 February 2010 15:56, Daniel J. Luke wrote:
> On Feb 17, 2010, at 10:51 AM, Sam Kuper wrote:
> > Now, I've just had a look in /var/vm . It contains a dozen swapfiles of
> 67108864 bytes each, plus a sleepimage file of 2147483648 bytes. I've no
> idea whether this is normal or not, though: I'
On 17 February 2010 15:33, Daniel J. Luke wrote:
> On Feb 17, 2010, at 10:23 AM, Sam Kuper wrote:
> > On 17 February 2010 14:59, Sam Kuper wrote:
> > The latter command has got as far as "---> Building boost" but seems now
> to be stuck there and is now simply eating hard drive space. I had 3.03GB
Helo
to whoever, who wants to install the kile-devel port on OSX 10.4 Tiger:
That is not possible. I want to state this here, if someone plans to try
it.
But if ever there is someone who installed the kile-devel port on OSX 10.4
with success, I'm still interested, how you succeeded!
On th
On 17 February 2010 14:59, Sam Kuper wrote:
> The latter command has got as far as "---> Building boost" but seems now to
> be stuck there and is now simply eating hard drive space. I had 3.03GB free
> hard disk space when I ran the command, and now, 20 minutes later, have only
> 1.09GB free and
On 17 February 2010 14:59, Sam Kuper wrote:
> I just ran "sudo port -f -p clean --all all", which completed OK as far as
> I can tell, and then "sudo port upgrade outdated"...
>
I forgot to mention that I ran "sudo port selfupdate" before running "sudo
port -f -p clean --all all". So, my port in
Hi folks.
I just ran "sudo port -f -p clean --all all", which completed OK as far as I
can tell, and then "sudo port upgrade outdated". The latter command has got
as far as "---> Building boost" but seems now to be stuck there and is now
simply eating hard drive space. I had 3.03GB free hard disk
Installing GNU Document I got the following errors:
Warning: the following items did not execute (for xulrunner):
org.macports.activate org.macports.configure org.macports.build
org.macports.destroot org.macports.install
Warning: the following items did not execute (for xulrunner):
org.macports.ac
so maybe it's easier to reinstall everythink from scratch ...
thanks
johannes
On 17 Feb 2010, at 13:26, Scott C. Kennedy wrote:
> You can do the following to uninstall/re-install all ports...
>
> 1: port installed > installed_ports
> 2: port uninstall -f installed
> 3: for PORT_TO_INSTALL in `
You can do the following to uninstall/re-install all ports...
1: port installed > installed_ports
2: port uninstall -f installed
3: for PORT_TO_INSTALL in `awk '{print $1}' installed_ports`; do port
install $PORT_TO_INSTALL ; done
4: port installed > new_installed_ports
5: diff installed_ports ne
On 17 Feb 2010, at 12:43, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
> On Feb 17, 2010, at 05:39, Johannes Behr wrote:
>
>> On 17 Feb 2010, at 12:17, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
>>
>>> On Feb 17, 2010, at 04:48, Johannes Behr wrote:
>>>
is there a 32 bit version of macports for snow leopard
>>>
>>> If you're on a 32-b
On 17 Feb 2010, at 12:17, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
>
> On Feb 17, 2010, at 04:48, Johannes Behr wrote:
>
>> is there a 32 bit version of macports for snow leopard
>
> If you're on a 32-bit Mac, MacPorts will automatically build 32-bit, even on
> Snow Leopard.
Well, i do I know if I'm on a 32-bit
On Feb 17, 2010, at 05:39, Johannes Behr wrote:
> On 17 Feb 2010, at 12:17, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
>
>> On Feb 17, 2010, at 04:48, Johannes Behr wrote:
>>
>>> is there a 32 bit version of macports for snow leopard
>>
>> If you're on a 32-bit Mac, MacPorts will automatically build 32-bit, even on
On Feb 17, 2010, at 04:48, Johannes Behr wrote:
> is there a 32 bit version of macports for snow leopard
If you're on a 32-bit Mac, MacPorts will automatically build 32-bit, even on
Snow Leopard.
If you're on a 64-bit Mac but would like to build 32-bit, set build_arch to
i386 in macports.conf
Hi,
is there a 32 bit version of macports for snow leopard
regards
johannes
___
macports-users mailing list
macports-users@lists.macosforge.org
http://lists.macosforge.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/macports-users
89 matches
Mail list logo