diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'unix/2020-07-26-now-this-is-a-minimal-install.html')
-rw-r--r-- | unix/2020-07-26-now-this-is-a-minimal-install.html | 107 |
1 files changed, 107 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/unix/2020-07-26-now-this-is-a-minimal-install.html b/unix/2020-07-26-now-this-is-a-minimal-install.html new file mode 100644 index 0000000..07a398a --- /dev/null +++ b/unix/2020-07-26-now-this-is-a-minimal-install.html @@ -0,0 +1,107 @@ +<!DOCTYPE html> +<html> + <head> + <link rel="stylesheet" href="/includes/stylesheet.css" /> + <meta charset="utf-8" /> + <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1" /> + <meta + property="og:description" + content="The World Wide Web pages of Adam Carpenter" + /> + <meta property="og:image" content="/includes/images/logo_diag.png" /> + <meta property="og:site_name" content="53hor.net" /> + <meta property="og:title" content="Now This is a Minimal Install!" /> + <meta property="og:type" content="website" /> + <meta property="og:url" content="https://www.53hor.net" /> + <title>53hornet ➙ Now This is a Minimal Install!</title> + </head> + + <body> + <nav> + <ul> + <li> + <a href="/"> + <img src="/includes/icons/home-roof.svg" /> + Home + </a> + </li> + <li> + <a href="/about.html"> + <img src="/includes/icons/information-variant.svg" /> + About + </a> + </li> + <li> + <a href="/software.html"> + <img src="/includes/icons/git.svg" /> + Software + </a> + </li> + <li> + <a href="/hosted.html"> + <img src="/includes/icons/desktop-tower.svg" /> + Hosted + </a> + </li> + <li> + <a type="application/rss+xml" href="/rss.xml"> + <img src="/includes/icons/rss.svg" /> + RSS + </a> + </li> + <li> + <a href="/contact.html"> + <img src="/includes/icons/at.svg" /> + Contact + </a> + </li> + </ul> + </nav> + + <article> + <h1>Now This is a Minimal Install!</h1> + + <p> + I just got done configuring Poudriere on Freebsd 12.1-RELEASE. The + awesome thing about it is it allows you to configure and maintain your + own package repository. All of the ports and their dependencies are + built from source with personalized options. That means that I can + maintain my own repo of just the packages I need with just the + compile-time options I need. For example, for the Nvidia driver set I + disabled all Wayland related flags. I use Xorg so there was no need to + have that functionality built in. + </p> + + <p> + Compile times are pretty long but I hope to change that by upgrading my + home server to FreeBSD as well (from Ubuntu Server). Then I can + configure poudriere to serve up a ports tree and my own pkg repo from + there. The server is a lot faster than my laptop and will build packages + way faster, and I'll be able to use those packages on both the server + and my laptop and any jails I have running. Jails (and ZFS) also make + poudriere really cool to use as all of the building is done inside a + jail. When the time comes I can just remove the jail and poudriere ports + tree from my laptop and update pkg to point to my web server. + </p> + + <p> + This is, as I understand it, the sane way to do package management in + FreeBSD. The binary package repo is basically the ports tree + pre-assembled with default options. Sometimes those packages are + compiled without functionality that most users don't need. In those + situations, you're forced to use ports. The trouble is you're not really + supposed to mix ports and binary packages. The reason, again as I + understand it, is because ports are updated more frequently. So binary + packages and ports can have different dependency versions, which can + sometimes break compatibility on an upgrade. Most FreeBSD users + recommend installing everything with ports (which is just a make install + inside the local tree) but then you lose the package management features + that come with pkg. Poudriere lets you kind of do both by creating your + "own personal binary repo" out of a list of preconfigured, pre-built + ports. + </p> + + <p>FreeBSD rocks.</p> + </article> + </body> +</html> |