“The pkgsrc developers are very proud to announce the new pkgsrc-2006Q3 branch, which has support for more packages than previous branches. As well as updated versions of many packages, the infrastructure of pkgsrc itself has been improved for better platform and compiler support, and also for enhanced security. At the same time, the pkgsrc-2006Q2 branch has been deprecated, and continuing engineering starts on the pkgsrc-2006Q3 branch.”
Nice name
Could I get a mission statement with that?
A good place to get that would be the The pkgsrc guide, http://netbsd.org/Documentation/pkgsrc/.
The first section is titled, “What is pkgsrc?”
Ask a simple question, get modded down, not like the link was in that article, thanks.
pkgsrc-2006Q2 is one of the first packaging systems featuring Gnome 2.16. Binary packages for NetBSD and DragonFly will be available ASAP.
As a NetBSD user, I’ve always used pkgsrc on my native system. When I began using a solaris 10 desktop at work, I found blastwave and sunfreeware lacking and was glad to see that I could bootstrap pkgsrc on my system. It is also encouraging to see that DragonflyBSD support has picked up to where it is. I know that team had lofty goals for their own packaging system that was put on the backburner in favor of pkgsrc.
audit-packages is a really great tool to automatically audit your system for security issues with installed packages. Unfortunately, since the release cycle of firefox on pkgsrc was not kept up daily in the past, it meant I would have at least 5 vulnerabilities on my system due to each firefox release. Since it has been the number one application that has had issues, I’ve almost considered not installing firefox through the package system and instead using the automatic update feature of the browser. I will retry things with this pkgsrc release.
Unfortunately, since the release cycle of firefox on pkgsrc was not kept up daily in the past, it meant I would have at least 5 vulnerabilities on my system due to each firefox release.
We have been keeping the Firefox/Thunderbird/Seamonkey packages up-to-date almost the day after each release. The stable pkgsrc branch always lags behind a few days more (due to extra sanity-checking of updates), but is very up-to-date with security fixes as well. They few security issues left with Firefox ATM are still unpatched by Mozilla, so we can’t really do much about them, but they’re minor.
1. GWorkspace
2. JamVM
What were the problems?
I would also like to ask why Gnustep/Etoile is not fully supported? Lack of developers?