Ottavio Caruso <ottavio2006-usenet2012%yahoo.com@localhost> writes: > My system has grown to be a mix-and-match of binary packages installed > with pkgin and other packages compiled natively from pkgsrc. > > I have then removed some of the latter packages but I have Gbytes of > unused orphan packages. > > I know that "pkgin autoremove" can remove orphan packages but that > doesn't take in consideration compiled packages. > > I could force pkgin to "keep" some packages, but thay are really too many. > > Is there a native way to achieve this goal? > > How do you guys manage a system that grows a bit too big, without > sacrificing essential dependencies? As I understand it, pkgin's notion of "keepable" is exactly the same as a package not having automatic=YES. The packages that you manually built should not have automatic=YES set. So you should be able to "pkgin -n ar" and see what it wants to remove. The following will make 4 files, separating packages into automatic/manual and required/notrequired. Then you can adjust automatic. I use this to remove automatic-notrequired, but pkgin ar is better because it does it all in one step instead of having to redo it. rm -f PKG.automatic-required PKG.automatic-notrequired \ PKG.manual-required PKG.manual-notrequired for d in `cd /var/db/pkg && ls`; do D=/var/db/pkg/$d DREQ=$D/+REQUIRED_BY DINS=$D/+INSTALLED_INFO REQ=notrequired AUTO=manual if [ ! -d $D ]; then continue; fi if [ -s $DREQ ]; then REQ=required fi if [ -f $DINS ] && egrep 'automatic=(yes|YES)' $DINS > /dev/null; then AUTO=automatic fi echo $d >> PKG.$AUTO-$REQ done
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