Where to get pkgsrc and how to keep it up-to-date Before you download and extract the files, you need to decide where you want to extract them. When using pkgsrc as root user, pkgsrc is usually installed in /usr/pkgsrc. You are though free to install the sources and binary packages wherever you want in your filesystem, provided that the pathname does not contain white-space or other characters that are interpreted specially by the shell and some other programs. A safe bet is to use only letters, digits, underscores and dashes. Getting pkgsrc for the first time Before you download any pkgsrc files, you should decide whether you want the current branch or the stable branch. The latter is forked on a quarterly basis from the current branch and only gets modified for security updates. The names of the stable branches are built from the year and the quarter, for example &pkgsrc.version.latest;. The second step is to decide how you want to download pkgsrc. You can get it as a tar file or via CVS. Both ways are described here. Note that tar archive contains CVS working copy. Thus you can switch to using CVS at any later time. As tar archive The primary download location for all pkgsrc files is or (it points to the same location). There are a number of subdirectories for different purposes, which are described in detail in . The tar archive for the current branch is in the directory current and is called pkgsrc.tar.gz. It is autogenerated weekly. To save download time we provide bzip2- and xz-compressed archives which are published at pkgsrc.tar.bz2 and pkgsrc.tar.xz respectively. You can fetch the same files using FTP. The tar file for the stable branch &pkgsrc.version.latest; is in the directory &pkgsrc.branch.latest; and is also called &filename.pkgsrc.tarball.latest;. To download the latest pkgsrc stable tarball, run: &uprompt; ftp ftp://ftp.NetBSD.org/pub/pkgsrc/&pkgsrc.branch.latest;/&filename.pkgsrc.tarball.latest; If you prefer, you can also fetch it using "wget", "curl", or your web browser. Then, extract it with: &uprompt; tar -xzf pkgsrc.tar.gz -C /usr This will create the directory pkgsrc/ in /usr/ and all the package source will be stored under /usr/pkgsrc/. To download pkgsrc-current, run: &uprompt; ftp ftp://ftp.NetBSD.org/pub/pkgsrc/current/pkgsrc.tar.gz Via anonymous CVS To fetch a specific pkgsrc stable branch, run: &uprompt; cd /usr && cvs -q -z2 -d anoncvs@anoncvs.NetBSD.org:/cvsroot checkout -r &pkgsrc.branch.latest; -P pkgsrc This will create the directory pkgsrc/ in your /usr/ directory and all the package source will be stored under /usr/pkgsrc/. To fetch the pkgsrc current branch, run: &uprompt; cd /usr && cvs -q -z2 -d anoncvs@anoncvs.NetBSD.org:/cvsroot checkout -P pkgsrc Refer to the list of available mirrors to choose a faster CVS mirror, if needed. If you get error messages from rsh, you need to set CVS_RSH variable. E.g.: &uprompt; cd /usr && env CVS_RSH=ssh cvs -q -z2 -d anoncvs@anoncvs.NetBSD.org:/cvsroot checkout -P pkgsrc Refer to documentation on your command shell how to set CVS_RSH=ssh permanently. For Bourne shells, you can set it in your .profile or better globally in /etc/profile: # set CVS remote shell command CVS_RSH=ssh export CVS_RSH By default, CVS doesn't do things like most people would expect it to do. But there is a way to convince CVS, by creating a file called .cvsrc in your home directory and saving the following lines to it. This file will save you lots of headache and some bug reports, so we strongly recommend it. You can find an explanation of this file in the CVS documentation. # recommended CVS configuration file from the pkgsrc guide cvs -q checkout -P update -dP diff -upN rdiff -u release -d Keeping pkgsrc up-to-date The preferred way to keep pkgsrc up-to-date is via CVS (which also works if you have first installed it via a tar file). It saves bandwidth and hard disk activity, compared to downloading the tar file again. Via tar files When updating from a tar file, you first need to completely remove the old pkgsrc directory. Otherwise those files that have been removed from pkgsrc in the mean time will not be removed on your local disk, resulting in inconsistencies. When removing the old files, any changes that you have done to the pkgsrc files will be lost after updating. Therefore updating via CVS is strongly recommended. Note that by default the distfiles and the binary packages are saved in the pkgsrc tree, so don't forget to rescue them before updating. You can also configure pkgsrc to store distfiles and packages in directories outside the pkgsrc tree by setting the DISTDIR and PACKAGES variables. See for the details. To update pkgsrc from a tar file, download the tar file as explained above. Then, make sure that you have not made any changes to the files in the pkgsrc directory. Remove the pkgsrc directory and extract the new tar file. Done. Via CVS To update pkgsrc via CVS, change to the pkgsrc directory and run cvs: &uprompt; cd /usr/pkgsrc && cvs update -dP If you get error messages from rsh, you need to set CVS_RSH variable as described above. E.g.: &uprompt; cd /usr/pkgsrc && env CVS_RSH=ssh cvs up -dP Switching between different pkgsrc branches When updating pkgsrc, the CVS program keeps track of the branch you selected. But if you, for whatever reason, want to switch from the stable branch to the current one, you can do it by adding the option -A after the update keyword. To switch from the current branch back to the stable branch, add the -r&pkgsrc.branch.latest; option. What happens to my changes when updating? When you update pkgsrc, the CVS program will only touch those files that are registered in the CVS repository. That means that any packages that you created on your own will stay unmodified. If you change files that are managed by CVS, later updates will try to merge your changes with those that have been done by others. See the CVS manual, chapter update for details.