cvs-supfile revision 120002
1# $FreeBSD: head/share/examples/cvsup/cvs-supfile 120002 2003-09-12 09:09:49Z ceri $ 2# 3# This file contains all of the "CVSup collections" that make up the 4# CVS development tree of the FreeBSD system. 5# 6# CVSup (CVS Update Protocol) allows you to download the latest CVS 7# tree (or any branch of development therefrom) to your system easily 8# and efficiently (far more so than with sup, which CVSup is aimed 9# at replacing). If you're running CVSup interactively, and are 10# currently using an X display server, you should run CVSup as follows 11# to keep your CVS tree up-to-date: 12# 13# cvsup cvs-supfile 14# 15# If not running X, or invoking cvsup from a non-interactive script, then 16# run it as follows: 17# 18# cvsup -g -L 2 cvs-supfile 19# 20# You may wish to change some of the settings in this file to better 21# suit your system: 22# 23# host=CHANGE_THIS.FreeBSD.org 24# This specifies the server host which will supply the 25# file updates. You must change it to one of the CVSup 26# mirror sites listed in the FreeBSD Handbook at 27# http://www.freebsd.org/doc/handbook/mirrors.html. 28# You can override this setting on the command line 29# with cvsup's "-h host" option. 30# 31# base=/usr 32# This specifies the root where CVSup will store information 33# about the collections you have transferred to your system. 34# A setting of "/usr" will generate this information in 35# /usr/sup. Even if you are CVSupping a large number of 36# collections, you will be hard pressed to generate more than 37# ~1MB of data in this directory. You can override the 38# "base" setting on the command line with cvsup's "-b base" 39# option. This directory must exist in order to run CVSup. 40# 41# prefix=/home/ncvs 42# This specifies where to place the requested files. A 43# setting of "/home/ncvs" will place all of the files 44# requested in /home/ncvs (e.g., "/home/ncvs/src/bin", 45# "/home/ncvs/ports/archivers"). The prefix directory 46# must exist in order to run CVSup. 47 48# Defaults that apply to all the collections 49# 50# IMPORTANT: Change the next line to use one of the CVSup mirror sites 51# listed at http://www.freebsd.org/doc/handbook/mirrors.html. 52*default host=CHANGE_THIS.FreeBSD.org 53*default base=/usr 54*default prefix=/home/ncvs 55*default release=cvs 56*default delete use-rel-suffix 57 58# If your network link is a T1 or faster, comment out the following line. 59*default compress 60 61## Main Source Tree. 62# 63# The easiest way to get the main source tree is to use the "src-all" 64# mega-collection. It includes all of the individual "src-*" collections. 65src-all 66 67# These are the individual collections that make up "src-all". If you 68# use these, be sure to comment out "src-all" above. 69#src-base 70#src-bin 71#src-contrib 72#src-etc 73#src-games 74#src-gnu 75#src-include 76#src-kerberos5 77#src-kerberosIV 78#src-lib 79#src-libexec 80#src-release 81#src-sbin 82#src-share 83#src-sys 84#src-tools 85#src-usrbin 86#src-usrsbin 87# These are the individual collections that make up FreeBSD's crypto 88# collection. They are no longer export-restricted and are a part of 89# src-all 90#src-crypto 91#src-eBones 92#src-secure 93#src-sys-crypto 94 95## Ports Collection. 96# 97# The easiest way to get the ports tree is to use the "ports-all" 98# mega-collection. It includes all of the individual "ports-*" 99# collections, 100ports-all 101 102# These are the individual collections that make up "ports-all". If you 103# use these, be sure to comment out "ports-all" above and always include 104# "ports-base" if you use any of the other individual collections below. 105# Your ports may not build correctly without an up-to-date "ports-base". 106# 107#ports-base 108# 109#ports-archivers 110#ports-astro 111#ports-audio 112#ports-benchmarks 113#ports-biology 114#ports-cad 115#ports-chinese 116#ports-comms 117#ports-converters 118#ports-databases 119#ports-deskutils 120#ports-devel 121#ports-dns 122#ports-editors 123#ports-emulators 124#ports-finance 125#ports-french 126#ports-ftp 127#ports-games 128#ports-german 129#ports-graphics 130#ports-hebrew 131#ports-hungarian 132#ports-irc 133#ports-japanese 134#ports-java 135#ports-korean 136#ports-lang 137#ports-mail 138#ports-math 139#ports-mbone 140#ports-misc 141#ports-multimedia 142#ports-net 143#ports-news 144#ports-palm 145#ports-picobsd 146#ports-polish 147#ports-portuguese 148#ports-print 149#ports-russian 150#ports-science 151#ports-security 152#ports-shells 153#ports-sysutils 154#ports-textproc 155#ports-ukrainian 156#ports-vietnamese 157#ports-www 158#ports-x11 159#ports-x11-clocks 160#ports-x11-fm 161#ports-x11-fonts 162#ports-x11-servers 163#ports-x11-toolkits 164#ports-x11-wm 165 166## Documentation 167# 168# The easiest way to get the doc tree is to use the "doc-all" 169# mega-collection. It includes all of the individual "doc-*" 170# collections, 171doc-all 172 173## CVSROOT control files 174# 175# This is to get the control files that cvs(1) needs and the commit logs. 176cvsroot-all 177 178# These are the individual collections that make up "cvsroot-all" If you 179# use these, be sure to comment out "cvsroot-all" above. "cvsroot-common" 180# is a synthetic CVSROOT that has all the modules from the other CVSROOT-* 181# directories merged into one, and merged commitlogs via symlinks. 182#cvsroot-common 183#cvsroot-src 184#cvsroot-ports 185#cvsroot-doc 186