NetBSD Branches pkgsrc-2005Q1 29
jschauma writes "NetBSD's Alistair Crooks has
announced the availability of the new stable branch pkgsrc-2005Q1 of the
NetBSD Packages
Collection (aka pkgsrc). This branch
includes all the updates to the thousands of existing and additions of
hundreds of new applications since the hereby obsoleted pkgsrc-2004Q4 branch.
Some noteworthy infrastructure changes applicable to all 13 operating systems
for which pkgsrc is available include the support for multiple digests to
check the integrity of the distribution files as found on the Internet
(triggered by the recently-found
problems with the SHA-1 algorithm) and the so-called alternates
framework."
Wired News Confirms *BSD is Dying (Score:1)
*BSD is Dying, Says Respected Journal
Linux advocates have long insisted that open-source development results in better and more secure software. Now they have statistics to back up their claims.
According to a four-year analysis of the 5.7 million lines of Linux source code conducted by five Stanford University computer science researchers, the Linux kernel programming code is better and more secure than the programming code of *BSD.
The report,
Binary packages? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Binary packages? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Binary packages? (Score:1, Insightful)
I've heard a lot of good things about pkgsrc, and how it's ultra-portable etc. That's why I'm surprised that pkgsrc still does not have a decent way to do something as "simple" as upgrading binary packages recursively. I say "simple" since upgrading binary packages should be relatively straightforward, seeing that pkgsrc developers must have looked into a lot of complex package management issues (after all, pkgsrc is portabl
Re:Binary packages? (Score:3)
Re:Binary packages? (Score:1)
Thanks for your insight into pkgsrc.
This is what the OpenBSD man page says about pkg_add -r.
I guess it's unfair to compare NetBSD's pkgsrc to OpenBSD's package management. I think that's because NetBSD's pkgsr
Re:Binary packages? (Score:1, Informative)
-u If the package that's being installed is already installed,
either in the same or a different version, an update is per-
formed. If this is specified twice, then any dependant packages
that are too old will also be updated to fulfill the dependency.
See below for a more detailed description of the process.
Re:Binary packages? (Score:2)
NetBSD-2.0/amd64 [netbsd.org], NetBSD-2.0/i386 [netbsd.org], NetBSD-1.6.2/i386 [netbsd.org], NetBSD-2.0/sparc [netbsd.org] and IRIX64-6.5 [netbsd.org] (including PGP signed checksum files).
Re:yeah !! (Score:2)
Branching lets people use a continuing product with one development model while another version of the same product is worked on with another development model. After a certain agreed-upon stage of development, the roles change. For instance, the unstable branch gets to a stage of maturity, and it is made the stable branch.
That's why BSDs always have something stable and typi