On 06/10/2011 11:34, Andre Oppermann wrote: > On a newly installed development machine I installed subversion-freebsd > from ports and ended up with a huge dependency chain. Eventually I got > the usual gnu-hell (auto-*, lib*), but also python27, tcl-8.5, perl-5.12 > and m4. This is a bit too much. The last four should not be required to > check out the FreeBSD source tree. They also may conflict with newer > versions one wants to have on a development machine (python3, perl6, ...). > > Is there a way to cut this down a bit and just have a svn client with only > the necessary stuff? As it happens, I'm working on some scripts to generate GraphViz dependency diagrams for ports, and purely coincidentally the subversion-freebsd port is one of my test cases. You can see the result here: http://www.infracaninophile.co.uk/svnf.png Now this reflects some local settings on my system, like installing openssl from ports, but overall, the picture should still be pretty standard. One thing to note is that at runtime you only need the dependencies connected by a continuous sequence of edges marked 'R' (run) or 'L' (library) (maybe with other letters) and with a green arrow head. So all of the autotools stuff, perl, python, tcl, gmake, libtool are disposable once you've built the port. Or build packages off-line and install those, which will avoid installing any fetch/extract/patch/build dependencies in the first place. Cheers, Matthew -- Dr Matthew J Seaman MA, D.Phil. 7 Priory Courtyard Flat 3 PGP: http://www.infracaninophile.co.uk/pgpkey Ramsgate JID: matthew_at_infracaninophile.co.uk Kent, CT11 9PW
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