On Tue, Jan 27, 2009 at 4:34 PM, Grant <emailgr...@gmail.com> wrote: >> If you are installing a package by hand and wants to revert back to >> the previous state, best is to : >> >> - when you ./configure it, use the various --prefix directives (do a >> ./configure --help for information on that) >> - when you want to remove, make uninstall in the source dir (so don't >> remove it!) >> - if it does not have a remove, usually if you install it inside >> /home/${username}/whatever, then removing that is fine. >> >> Best thing though is to write an ebuild and then Portage will sandbox >> the build so it knows every file that has been installed. >> >> The package knows where to link to when it goes into the ./configure >> stage and won't act like windows, installing stuffs into registry or >> the like ... everything's nicely contained inside /lib and /share >> folders (except /etc files ...which you can safely ignore them there - >> those are just text files and you'll know where they are anyway if you >> intend to configure miro) > > Thanks everyone. I've never been open to manual compile/installation > but I can give it a try now.
Once you learn the basics, most programs are the same (configure/make) and it's not so bad. Obviously the advice to read the README/INSTALL files is golden, they will almost always tell you what you need to know. On my home PC I used to tri-boot OS/2 (my first love), Win95 (wintendo) and Slackware (version 2 or 3?), so back then I think everything had to be manually configured and compiled pretty much. I guess it all seems kind of obvious once you already know how to do it. We've come a long way since then. :)