07eedea6c2
- phase one builds the essential tools in the bare minimal version needed by the infrastructure to run "make install". - phase two runs "make install" for all the bootstrap packages. Set WRKOBJDIR for the second phase, we never want to leave garbage around. This increases the time for running bootstrap, but gives more deterministic results. It also means that e.g. configuration files in pkg_install can be handled normally. It is a prerequirement to sanely allow pkg_install some more extended work like building its own libarchive without having to worry too much about limitations on some platforms. This fixes the expansion of @gzcat@ in the download-vulnerability-list script. Tested by tnn@ on Interix and myself on DragonFly. |
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.. | ||
bootstrap | ||
cleanup | ||
darwindiskimage | ||
macpkg.pmproj.in | ||
mkbinarykit | ||
README | ||
README.AIX | ||
README.Darwin | ||
README.FreeBSD | ||
README.HPUX | ||
README.Interix | ||
README.IRIX | ||
README.IRIX5.3 | ||
README.Linux | ||
README.MacOSX | ||
README.OpenBSD | ||
README.OSF1 | ||
README.Solaris | ||
testbootstrap |
$NetBSD: README,v 1.9 2007/07/02 19:05:29 tnn 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> ] [ --varbase <varbase> ] [ --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 --varbase /var --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 pkgsrc/doc/pkgsrc.txt or http://www.netbsd.org/docs/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. Please remember to add $prefix/bin to your PATH environment variable and $prefix/man to your MANPATH environment variable, if necessary. (See above for --prefix and its default value.) The bootstrap script will create an example mk.conf file located in your work directory as "mk.conf.example". It contains the settings you provided to the bootstrap. Copy it to your $sysconfdir directory (see above about --sysconfdir and its default value).