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PORTEASY(8)            DragonFly System Manager's Manual           PORTEASY(8)

NAME

porteasy - fetch and build ports

SYNOPSIS

porteasy [-AabCceFfhIikLlRSsuVvw] [-D date] [-d dir] [-p dir] [-r dir] [-t tag] [port | -DVAR | -DVAR=VAL ...]

DESCRIPTION

porteasy maintains an updated ports tree, and fetches and builds ports automatically, keeping track of dependencies. The following options are available: -a Use one of the FreeBSD project's anonymous CVS servers. Note that this forces the use of ssh(1), regardless of the -R and -S options. -b Build the selected ports. -C Don't clean port directories after building. -c Clean the selected ports. -D date Specify a date to use for cvs(1) operations. -d dir Specify the package database directory (normally /var/db/pkg). -e Deselect ports that are already installed. -F Force installation and registration, even if the port is already installed. -f Fetch the selected ports. -h Show a summary of options and parameters. -I Select installed ports. -i Describe the selected ports. -k Build packages for the selected ports. -L List the packing lists for the selected ports. -l List the selected ports. -p dir Specify the ports directory (normally /usr/ports). -R Force the use of rsh(1) to connect to remote CVS repositories. By default, porteasy respects the existing CVS_RSH setting. This option is ignored when using anoncvs. -r dir Specify the location of the CVS repository. -S Force the use of ssh(1) to connect to remote CVS repositories. By default, porteasy respects the existing CVS_RSH setting. This option is ignored when using anoncvs. -s Indicate the installation status of the selected ports. Each selected port is listed with a symbol indicating its status: `!' Not installed. ` ' Up-to-date. `<' Older than the version in the ports tree. `>' Newer than the version in the ports tree. If the -s option is specified and no ports are specified on the command line, all installed ports are selected as if the -I option had been specified. -t tag Specify a tag to use for cvs(1) operations. -u Update all necessary files using cvs(1). -V Show the porteasy version number and exit. -v Verbose mode: show more information about what is being done. -w Show the URL of the port's web site if there is one listed in the port description. Environment settings Any command line argument of the form -DVAR, -DVAR=VAL or VAR=VAL is interpreted as a variable assignment which will be exported into subprocesses' environments. Thus compile-time configuration options can be specified on the porteasy command line. Port names The port names listed on the command line may be either unqualified or fully qualified. A fully qualified port name is the path to the port directory relative to the root of the ports tree (i.e. the port's category and name separated by a slash). An unqualified port name is the name of the package built by the intended port, or part of that name. Unqualified names need to be looked up in the ports index, which is usually slightly out of date, so fully qualified names should be used whenever possible. Sequence of operation This section describes the operations performed by porteasy and the order in which they are performed. Update ports tree infrastructure If the -u option was specified, the root of the ports tree and important subdirectories (Mk, Templates and Tools) are updated using cvs(1). If possible, an up-to-date index is retrieved from the FreeBSD website; otherwise, the version obtained from CVS will be used. Select ports The selection list is initialized with the ports listed on the command line (and, if the -I option was specified, all installed ports) marked as explicit dependencies. Any unqualified names are looked up in the index, using simple heuristics to identify incompletely named ports. If a certain match is not found, porteasy prints a list of possible matches and exits. All direct and indirect dependencies (except, if the -e option was specified, those that are already installed) are also selected and marked as dependencies. Update ports tree and discover dependencies If the -u option was specified, the port directories for all selected ports are updated using cvs(1). Each selected port's Makefile is scanned to discover dependencies, which are in turn selected and marked as implicit dependencies. This process is repeated until no new dependencies are found. Deselect installed ports If the -e option was specified, porteasy checks to see if any of the selected ports are already installed; those that are are deselected. This process is not very accurate, as it sometimes fails to detect that an older or alternate version of a selected port is installed. List selected ports If the -l option was specified, the fully qualified name and package name of all selected ports are listed. Explicitly selected ports are indicated with a star. List installed ports If the -s option was specified, all selected ports are listed with their status. Show packing lists If the option was specified, the packing lists for all explicitly selected ports are shown. Describe selected ports If the -i option was specified, porteasy prints a description of each port that was specified on the command line. Show the URLs of the selected ports' web sites If the -w option was specified, porteasy prints the URL of the web site of each port that was specified on the command line, if a URL is listed in that port's description. Clean the tree If the -c option was specified, porteasy runs the `clean' target on every selected port. If no ports were selected, porteasy runs the `clean' target on every known port that is present in the tree. Fetch ports If at least one of the -b, -f or -k options was specified, porteasy runs the `checksum' target on every selected port. This fetches the distfiles and verifies their checksums. Build, install, package, clean ports If one or both of the -f or -k options were specified, porteasy runs the `install' or `package' target, followed by the `clean' target (unless the -C option was specified), on every explicitly selected port. porteasy lets the ports system handle dependencies on its own, since the reported dependencies are sometimes too inclusive.

IMPLEMENTATION NOTES

There may be a significant difference between what ports are selected (and listed if the -l option is specified) and what ports are actually installed and/or have packages built for them, since implicitly selected ports that are already installed, or somehow pass the dependency check (e.g. because an alternate, equivalent port has been installed) will be passed over by the ports system, as indeed they should. porteasy tries to minimize the number of times cvs(1) is invoked, since the overhead involved in connecting to a remote server is usually quite high (and the user might have to type a password every time), but prefers correctness to performance. The maximum number of invocations is (2 + NC + NP), where NC and NP are the number of distinct categories and ports (including master directories and dependencies).

ENVIRONMENT

PORTEASY_OPTIONS Specifies a set of default options for porteasy. These options can be overridden by command line parameters. The following variables are removed from the environment before any work is performed: CLASSPATH, LD_*, JAVA_*, USE_*, WANT_*.

FILES

porteasy maintains and operates on a ports tree, normally /usr/ports. Some information is gathered from the package database, normally located in /var/db/pkg.

AUTHORS

porteasy was written by Dag-Erling Smorgrav <des@FreeBSD.org>. Several people contributed their comments and suggestions, most notably Eivind Eklund <eivind@FreeBSD.org>. DragonFly 6.5-DEVELOPMENT August 12, 2005 DragonFly 6.5-DEVELOPMENT

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