On Wed, Jan 25, 2006 at 02:12:38AM +0900, Kalin KOZHUHAROV wrote:
> r100
> emerge foo
> r101
> emerge --unmerge foo
> r102
You're like asking to put your entire system under a versioning system
control. Sounds like fun, but also like a lot of diskspace usage on your
versioning server.
$ ${VCTOOL}
On Tue, 24 Jan 2006, Francesco Riosa wrote:
> Better create the list from /var/db/pkg/* , world file only own the file
> explicitly merged, leaving out any dependencies (fex libraries).
Yes you're right - that is what I did last time I played with this.
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gentoo-dev@gentoo.org mailing li
A. Khattri wrote:
> On Tue, 24 Jan 2006, Wernfried Haas wrote:
>
>> - adding buildpkg to your FEATURES builds binary packages, which makes
>> it faster to revert to older versions if the new one cause
>> problems.
>
> You could also use quickpkg, i.e. write a script that interates through
> w
On Tue, 24 Jan 2006, Wernfried Haas wrote:
> - adding buildpkg to your FEATURES builds binary packages, which makes
> it faster to revert to older versions if the new one cause
> problems.
You could also use quickpkg, i.e. write a script that interates through
world and runs quickpkg on each
2 (already implemented) things you may find useful (unless you know
them already of course):
- adding buildpkg to your FEATURES builds binary packages, which makes
it faster to revert to older versions if the new one cause
problems.
- dispatch-conf does a great job for the configuration files,
On Wed, 25 Jan 2006 02:12:38 +0900
Kalin KOZHUHAROV <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi all.
>
> During the last many months, more than once an idea occured in my
> mind, so I decided to share it.
>
>
> 2006-01-25T01:34 kalin $ dd if=/dev/brain of=gentoo-dev bs=1
> count=3292
>
> Do you think it w