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PORTSDB(1) DragonFly General Commands Manual PORTSDB(1)
NAME
portsdb, ports_glob - tools to manage and look up the ports database file
SYNOPSIS
portsdb [-hfFquU]
ports_glob [-hMrR] [-x pkgname_glob | portorigin_glob]
[pkgname_glob | portorigin_glob] ...
DESCRIPTION
The portsdb command is a tool to generates the ports database named
INDEX.db from the ports index file named INDEX. It is commonly used
among the tool suite and automatically updated on demand when it gets
older than the index file. To save time, you can update it beforehand,
like right after the index file is updated. Note that INDEX file is
updated every few hours on official site, it is recommended that you run
"portsdb -Fu" after every CVSup of the ports tree in order to keep them
always up-to-date and in sync with the ports tree.
ports_glob looks up the ports database to expand given patterns.
Actually, portsdb and ports_glob share an entity and are totally
equivalent.
Before reading these instructions, you must understand that a
port/package can have the following two types of related ports/packages:
required Ports/packages that a port/package needs for it to be built
and/or run. Port Makefiles refer to this type of
ports/packages using the BUILD_DEPENDS and RUN_DEPENDS macros,
respectively.
dependent Ports/packages that need this port/package.
OPTIONS
The following command line arguments are supported:
pkgname_glob Specify one of these: a full pkgname, a pkgname without
version, a shell glob pattern in which you can use
wildcards `*', `?', and `[..]' (e.g. "zsh", "gnome*",
"bash-2*", etc.), or an extended regular expression
preceded by a colon `:'.
ports_glob lists ports which pkgnames match the pattern.
portorigin_glob
Specify a shell glob pattern. (e.g. "archivers/p5-*"), or
an extended regular expression preceded by a colon `:'.
ports_glob lists ports that match the pattern.
Do not forget to include a slash if you want ports_glob to
treat a pattern as a portorigin glob.
-h
--help Show help and exit.
-f
--force Force to update database regardless of timestamps.
-F
--fetchindex Fetch the ports index file called INDEX from the official
site.
-M
--master-recursive
List all master ports of the given ports as well. It also
lists the master ports of all those required by the given
ports if -R is specified.
-q
--noconfig Do not read the configuration file -
$PREFIX/etc/pkgtools.conf.
-r
--recursive List all those ports depending on the given ports as well.
-R
--upward-recursive
List all those ports required by the given ports as well.
-u
--update Update or create the ports database file INDEX.db from the
ports index file. It is in binary form and meant to be
fast to search for information.
Note: the ports database file is automatically updated if
it is not up-to-date when looked up, so manual updating is
not mandatory.
-U
--updateindex Update or create the INDEX file by running "make index".
If you define special macros in /etc/make.conf and the
dependency of some ports are changed, you should create
INDEX by yourself by using this option. Otherwise, using
-F option is recommended since it is much faster.
-x portorigin_glob
--exclude portorigin_glob
Exclude ports matching the specified glob pattern from the
list.
ENVIRONMENT
PORTSDIR Alternative location for the ports tree. Default is
"/usr/ports".
PORTS_INDEX Alternative location for the ports INDEX file. Default is
"$PORTSDIR/INDEX".
It is recommendable that you set this variable to
something other than the default to avoid conflict with
CVS, CVSup, or CTM.
PORTS_DBDIR Alternative location for the ports database file. The
database file will be located in the first writable
directory in the following ones: $PORTS_DBDIR, $PORTSDIR,
/usr/ports, $PKG_DBDIR, /var/db/pkg, $TMPDIR, /var/tmp,
and /tmp.
PKGTOOLS_CONF Configuration file for the pkgtools suite. Default is
"$PREFIX/etc/pkgtools.conf".
FILES
/var/db/pkg Default location of the installed package
database.
/usr/ports Default location of the ports tree.
INDEX Ports index file, located right under the
ports tree.
INDEX.db Ports database file, located in $PORTS_DBDIR.
$PREFIX/etc/pkgtools.conf Default location of the pkgtools configuration
file.
SEE ALSO
pkgdb(1), portversion(1), pkgtools.conf(5), ports(7)
AUTHORS
Akinori MUSHA <knu@iDaemons.org>
BUGS
-S -/ --slave-recursive is not implemented yet.
-M is very slow due to the limitation of make(1) and ports(7).
FreeBSD June 13, 2006 FreeBSD