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pkgsrc/mk/defaults/mk.conf. This is from PR 30741 from anonymous AT example.net. |
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bmake | ||
files | ||
mods | ||
bootstrap | ||
cleanup | ||
mkbinarykit | ||
mkbootstrapkit | ||
pkg.sh | ||
README | ||
README.AIX | ||
README.Darwin | ||
README.FreeBSD | ||
README.Interix | ||
README.IRIX | ||
README.Linux | ||
README.MacOSX | ||
README.OpenBSD | ||
README.OSF1 | ||
README.Solaris | ||
testbootstrap | ||
ufsdiskimage |
$NetBSD: README,v 1.5 2005/04/10 22:03:35 jschauma Exp $ To try to get pkgsrc working on your system, please try the following as root: # ./bootstrap [ --workdir <workdir> ] [ --prefix <prefix> ] [ --pkgdbdir <pkgdbdir> ] [ --sysconfdir <sysconfdir> ] [ --ignore-case-check ] [ --ignore-user-check ] [ --preserve-path ] [ --help ] The defaults for the arguments are as follows: --prefix /usr/pkg --pkgdbdir /var/db/pkg --sysconfdir /usr/pkg/etc --workdir work It is perfectly acceptable to place 'pkgdbdir' under 'prefix'. The working directory will be created if it doesn't exist and has to be writable by the user executing ./bootstrap. Make sure that you have a working C compiler and make(1) binary in your path. Please note that on some systems (IRIX and SunOS, for example), the bootstrap script will look into a number of common directories for alternative implementations of some tools. If they are found, these directories will be prepended to the PATH variable, unless the '--preserve-path' flag is given. See http://www.netbsd.org/Documentation/software/packages.html for more information about bootstrapping and using pkgsrc. We'd be very interested in hearing of any successes or failures on "unknown" (to us) systems.