On Sun, Jul 08, 2012 at 11:05:29PM -0400, Thomas Mueller wrote:
> pkgsrc is NetBSD's version of FreeBSD ports framework but also ported
> to other, mostly (quasi-)Unix OSes including even FreeBSD.

Mark Linimon <[email protected]> responded:

> To correct a misapprehension: although many years ago pkgsrc and
> FreeBSD ports shared common ancestry, it is not fair to say that
> pkgsrc is their "version".  pkgsrc and FreeBSD ports have different
> goals, and to that purpose, pkgsrc has been through multiple major
> rewrites and no longer even vaguely resembles FreeBSD ports.  As
> well, the FreeBSD ports infrastructure has evolved substantially.

> IIUC pkgsrc's major goal is to run on as many OSes as possible, and
> to that end has to do a tremendous amount of work to evade those
> limitations.  We don't have that problem, nor the bootstraping problems
> that are associated.

> I'm sure there are many other places where we have diverged.

> mcl

pkgsrc is NetBSD's version of FreeBSD ports framework in that it plays the same 
role in NetBSD, even if the infrastructures have greatly diverged.

Nothing like buildlink3.mk in FreeBSD ports.

But I see partial resemblances in the directory structures of pkgsrc and 
FreeBSD ports framework.

Most of the base system of *BSD would be packages in Linux.  This poses great 
difficulty porting a BSD package-management system to Linux, as pkgsrc has 
tried to do.  What to do with coreutils, util-linux, udev and now systemd?

Tom
_______________________________________________
[email protected] mailing list
http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-ports
To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[email protected]"

Reply via email to