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Re: Port help wanted/needed?
On Wed, Jan 21, 2009 at 11:46:28AM -0800, jscottkasten%yahoo.com@localhost
wrote:
> Actually, there probably are plenty of places you can help, especially with a
> strong admin and security background.
> Some things might involve doing builds. I know you said you were not a
> coder, but I'm sure you're no stranger to running an automated build or
> launching a make process to configure, build, and install an application.
> If you are willing to do that, the doors are wide open.
> Many of the ports run behind the i386 port even at the same release number in
> some areas. For example, i386 kernels ship with packet filtering and cgd
> enabled. Yet those types of things are not enabled, and often of unknown
> status in many ports.
All very good points. I just wasn't sure if there were areas that folks
were already concentrating where I'd be just wasting my time!
Very true. I'll admit, I haven't run NetBSD as my primary i386 desktop
in a few years now, so I don't know how big the differences are now. I
think it'd be worth it to get it going in a VM and start comparing. I
can start beating on that pretty soon.
> Another area is pkgsrc builds. Look at what has been done, and see what is
> needed. I've been working with the hpcmips port the last year. Who knew
> that the mesa OpenGL port actually worked.....until it was tried.
Heh. Good point. I can't say that I've done a meta-pkgs build of gnome
on that thing in the past few years. I've never been able to get it to
complete in the past due to different things. I guess it's time to fire
that back up.
(which, of course, begs the question of who would want to run gnome on a
3/60....)
> Consider also that lack of hardware need not block someone from contributing.
> I've had great success using things like GXEMUL and others to run a specific
> port in an emulator. I've built the bulk of pkgsrc for hpcmips 4.0 that way.
> I think if you just start "doing" you will find a niche into which you can
> contribute pretty quickly. Some of these lists are pretty quiet, but all it
> takes sometimes is a newbie to wake up some of the old timers.
Right on.. thanks for the pointers. I hadn't started playing with tme
until yesterday since I wasn't sure how stable it was... it's excellent
all around. The nice thing is that I'm pretty familiar with NetBSD due
to prior lives, so diving back in has been a breeze...
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