Re: How do YOU stay up to date?

From: Lee Mx (lee_ver_mx_at_hotmail.com)
Date: 01/15/04

  • Next message: Lowell Gilbert: "Re: (Yet Another) Home Networking Question"
    To: listsub@401.cx, duanewinner@att.net
    Date: Thu, 15 Jan 2004 06:13:25 -0800
    
    

    >From: "Roger 'Rocky' Vetterberg" <listsub@401.cx>
    >To: duanewinner@att.net
    >CC: freebsd-questions <freebsd-questions@freebsd.org>
    >Subject: Re: How do YOU stay up to date?
    >Date: Thu, 15 Jan 2004 11:34:45 +0100
    >
    >Duane Winner wrote:
    >
    >>Hello all again,
    >>
    >>I'm finally getting my arms around FreeBSD and the updating processes
    >>and tools. But I'm still trying to come up with good
    >>habits/methods/instructions for updating routines for both myself and my
    >>colleagues who also want to switch to FreeBSD.
    >>
    >>I now understand how to use cvsup to keep my src and ports tree current.
    >>I know how to use pkg_add -r to install new sotware, or go into
    >>/usr/ports/whatever to make install. I know how to do portupgrade to
    >>upgrade my installed ports, how to pkg_version -v to see what's out of
    >>date with my tree, and how to cronjob cvsup to keep my trees current. (I
    >>still need to play more with make world and whatnot)
    >>
    >>But what do you all out there in BSD land do to stay current as a
    >>practice? I'm looking at this on two fronts: FreeBSD on our laptops
    >>(There will be at least 3 of us with T23's, and I also plan on migrating
    >>most, if not all of my servers from Linux to FreeBSD).
    >
    >If you have the resources, you should consider using a dedicated machine
    >for compiling.
    >With ~10 laptops, a bunch of workstations and about 20-25 servers running
    >FreeBSD we use 2 dedicated machines that does nothing but download sources
    >and compiles them. One is tracking 4.x-STABLE and the other 5.x-RELEASE.
    >Anyone can nfs mount choosen directories from these machines and install
    >the pre-compiled software.
    >It works extremely well, once the users have learned the correct process.

    I'm doing something very similar with a dedicated server and for ports I do
    a daily upgrade with portupgrade -Rruap to upgrade and build a package that
    the users can then install because I have some very slow machines that would
    take days to build some of the larger ports and by just having the server's
    /usr/ports nfs mounted on their machines they can upgrade quickly by just
    using the -P option to portupgrade. I'm not sure if that is the best way to
    do it but it has worked well for me for sometime.

    Good luck,

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  • Next message: Lowell Gilbert: "Re: (Yet Another) Home Networking Question"

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