FreeBSD Port Tips

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Tips and tricks for creating, updating and maintaining FreeBSD ports, by Mark Foster

Creating and submitting port updates

General procedure that I use to update a port named foo to version 1.2.3. Download the new tarball from the source or vendor site and put in /usr/ports/distfiles

 cd /usr/ports/misc/foo
 make clean
 cd ..
 cp -pr foo foo.old; cd foo

Update Makefile to reflect the new version

 make makesum; make; make deinstall; make reinstall clean

Assuming everything worked, generate a patch file to submit for the send-pr

 cd /usr/ports/misc
 diff -ruN foo.old/ foo/  > /tmp/foo-1.2.3.patch
 send-pr -a /tmp/foo-1.2.3.patch

Use send-pr to complete the (problem) report to FreeBSD so the maintainer can review your patch and a committer can commit it to the master sources in cvs. More information about using send-pr can be found at http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/problem-reports/pr-writing.html

Note how -a is used above...must be careful about how you add the patch file contents into the pr, as there are likely tabs in the Makefile that must be preserved. Pasting the textual contents from a console window may have damaging results.

Updating a specific port using cvsup

Use the -i flag to cvsup to limit it to a specific port name.

 cvsup -g -L2 -i portname /etc/ports-supfile

Specifying GCC version compatibility

This can be used in a port's Makefile to enforce a minimum version of GCC

USE_GCC=        3.4+

This clause can be used in a port's Makefile to indicate brokenness on a particular version of GCC.

.if ${OSVERSION} >= 700042
BROKEN=         Does not compile with GCC 4.2
.endif


Maintainer vs. Committer

This email message provides a great explanation for how to create and submit updates to ports.

Reference Documentation

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