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14th March 21:11
External User
Posts: 1
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Hi! Having read the brief discussion here, downloaded the pkgsrc
slackware 9.1 tarball from http://www.netbsd.org and installed it using default values. An old bsd fan (GNU/Linux supports more hardware, which it why I use it), I chose Slackware due to the similarities to bsd and to the excellently documented config files. In spite of all my tinkering around with little knowledge, I never crashed Slack. BTW the link at the netbsd site to an article called "Slackware Linux with pkgsrc Packages" is currently broken. Any tips where one can find it? pkgsrc runs very smoothly except for the hiccoughs caused by package maintainers who don't keep their packages up to date when new versions of the dependencies, e. g. apel for emacs, are elsewhere fed into the tree. But a friendly email to the maintainer usually produces the desired effects within a few days. Not having seen what the xemacsers are up to for some time, I did bmake in the /usr/pkgsrc/editors/xemacs-current directory and let my SMP machine do some work. Occasionally, e. g. for perl, using the -B (backwards compatibility) switch as "bmake -B" helped bmake (netbsd users make) complete compilation that otherwise failed without this switch. Had to use the -k ("complete") switch to get the xemacs-packages to finish installation due to the version mismatches (apel and flim) mentioned above. There is a big set of tools to optimize the compiler in /etc/make.conf and to generally keep things tidy and under control. If a lazy, brain-amputated mere end user like yours truly can use pkgsrc, it is a piece of cake for the rest of you Slackwareians. ;-) Greetings, Lux -- If you receive this by error, please delete it and inform the sender. Key fingerprint: 8994 CFDD 9C60 C978 A488 689F 5DCC EFC4 4D36 580D To Big Brother Echelon from "spook": Blair colonel domestic disruption heroine Kennedy jihad cracking Cocaine |
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