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finally 2 cents of review here after a long time hiatus! thank you @des
May 6 2023
hello folks,
Mar 28 2023
ping @src
ping @src
Feb 13 2023
Feb 12 2023
Jan 23 2023
ping
ping
Jan 1 2023
In D36241#861449, @asomers wrote:The only problem I have with this new feature is that it is 75% redundant with updatesready. I think that having two so-similar features will confuse users. Is there any way to get the benefits of both, while not adding any new commands?
Dec 30 2022
any new input from @src would be really appreciated here; this is running smooth for me since past updates (for all supported releases).
In D27318#855240, @bcr wrote:OK from manpages for these latest changes. Thanks for your patience working on this patch!
Dec 27 2022
Dec 21 2022
Dec 6 2022
thanks @gbe !
it would be awesome to get approval from src, so we can land this one -- which I am using solo for quite a time
Nov 27 2022
changes since last update:
- rebased on top of freebsd/main 671f55828d03;
- applied sugestion from @imp, to make output checks more reproducible
Nov 26 2022
Nov 5 2022
any new inputs about it? shall we finally land the patch?
Nov 3 2022
any further suggestions or inputs about this change request? anyone?
I've being running that for quite a while and the fleet is green ever since.
hey there! hello @otis, thanks for flagging (and patching) that. much appreciated; that would speed up the fix you can commit it.
Oct 18 2022
Oct 15 2022
Oct 14 2022
Oct 3 2022
Sep 29 2022
Sep 28 2022
Sep 27 2022
- update diff, to sync latest changes from https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36516;
- apply suggestions from @allanjude (to avoid spawn new processes, using case).
In D27318#827073, @egypcio wrote:ping @kevans (or anyone else from src)?
mind to have a look again, to maybe approve it after all changes got applied; it should be ready-to-go.
Sep 1 2022
ping?
ping?
ping @kevans (or anyone else from src)?
mind to have a look again, to maybe approve it after all changes got applied; it should be ready-to-go.
Aug 22 2022
In D36241#824095, @asomers wrote:indeed the main difference is that check only fetches a bare minimum (and sanitized) tag, which tells us which version is available on FreeBSD's update servers.
check the TEST PLAN above
updatesready do not work in that way; it downloads like all binary files and at the end report back that one is able to run e.g.: freebsd-update install.
the so-called footprint and impact coming from the "client machines" against the update servers using this proposed check command is way smaller compared to running others like install - and, IMHO, that new check command can also be used in a way to verify for available upgrades as well (again, without really fetching all required files to perform such action).
But every user who runs "freebsd-update check" will eventually also run "freebsd-update fetch". So is the overall load any less this way? Does "freebsd-update fetch" download all files on every invocation, even if there are already downloaded files that haven't been installed?
In D36241#823751, @asomers wrote:I guess the main difference between check and updatesready is that the latter requires you to fetch the updates first, right? Is the workflow you envision a cron or periodic job that only runs freebsd-update check and informs the user if there are any updates, but makes them actually fetch those updates manually? For a user who eventually applies every update, will this new workflow result in less total load on the update servers, or about the same?
Aug 21 2022
Aug 19 2022
Aug 18 2022
Aug 17 2022
update the COMMANDS section on the manpage, to show commands sorted just like they are printed by freebsd-update -h
Aug 16 2022
Aug 15 2022
In D27318#821873, @des wrote:I'm sorry, but... why? freebsd-version(1) was never intended for human consumption, it was intended for use by configure scripts, installers, etc. Adding -j was bad enough, I'm sorry I didn't catch it in time (I suppose it's too late to remove it). If you want the kind of information -v would give you, use uname instead.