2.3 - How to install other FreeBSD packages / repositories?
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That would be great, jimp! Really.
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Not only great, that would be awesome!
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This does work in pfSense 2.3.2:
1. Make sure "enabled" key is set to "yes" in /etc/pkg/FreeBSD.conf
2. Change "enabled: no" to "enabled: yes" in /usr/local/etc/pkg/repos/FreeBSD.conf
3. Change "enabled: no" to "enabled: yes" in /usr/local/etc/pkg/repos/pfSense.conf for FreeBSD repo
4. Now you're able to install packages from FreeBSD official repo -
If you install packages that way you will most likely encounter dependency issues and potential conflicts with packages from our own repository, so do so at your own risk, knowing that you may end up having to reinstall when something goes wrong.
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It's a much better idea to ask the developers to add the missing packages to the pfSense repository, for most part if they missing package is a small utility there's no major overhead involved in adding it to the package builds. Just don't go on requesting stuff like www/chromium, there's a reason why web browsers will never be part of the repo :P
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@kpa:
It's a much better idea to ask the developers to add the missing packages to the pfSense repository, for most part if they missing package is a small utility there's no major overhead involved in adding it to the package builds. Just don't go on requesting stuff like www/chromium, there's a reason why web browsers will never be part of the repo :P
I agree with that.
The ask:
Can developers please add all official freebsd packages to pfsense repo but browsers? ;-) -
Can developers please add all official freebsd packages to pfsense repo but browsers? ;-)
Unfortunately, when working with a partial set, poudriere has to be given a list of package to build, rather than a list of packages to skip, so doing that is difficult.
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Usually you don't need to install anything from outside world on firewall. So doing that you must understand what are you doing at your own risk. If you understand, there is a lot of possibilities to do it. One of them is below.
For pfsense 2.3 till 2.3.2 -> /usr/local/etc/pkg/repos rename it to something else, for example 'renamed repos'
pkg update
pkg install anypackage_u_need
pkg creates new 'repos' folder, so
/usr/local/etc/pkg/repos rename it to something else or delete, rename you firstly 'renamed repos' back to 'repos'
done. -
Is there a suitable way to have munin-node installed at pfsense-2.3.2 ?
I've installed this depencies by hand and no end in sight:
pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-AnyEvent-7.12,1.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-DBI-1.636.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-common-sense-3.74.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/postgresql93-client-9.3.13_2.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-DBD-Pg-3.5.3.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-Net-CIDR-0.18.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-Net-SSLeay-1.77.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/munin-common-2.0.25_2.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-Error-0.17024.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-IO-String-1.08_1.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-TimeDate-2.30_2,1.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-Heap-0.80_1.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-File-NFSLock-1.21_1.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-Cache-2.11.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-IPC-ShareLite-0.17_1.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-Digest-SHA1-2.13_1.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-Cache-Cache-1.08.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-XML-NamespaceSupport-1.11_1.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-XML-SAX-Base-1.08_1.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-XML-SAX-0.99_2.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-XML-LibXML-2.0126,1.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-Digest-HMAC-1.03_1.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-Socket-2.021.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-IO-Socket-IP-0.37.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-Net-DNS-1.06_2,1.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/bash-4.3.46_1.txz mount -t fdescfs fdesc /dev/fd && echo "fdesc /dev/fd fdescfs rw 0 0" >> /etc/fstab pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-Try-Tiny-0.24.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-Module-Runtime-0.014_1.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-Class-Singleton-1.5_1.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-Module-Implementation-0.09_1.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-Params-Validate-1.24.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-List-SomeUtils-XS-0.52.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-Exporter-Tiny-0.042_1.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-List-SomeUtils-0.52.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-List-AllUtils-0.10.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-DateTime-TimeZone-2.00.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-Dist-CheckConflicts-0.11_1.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-Scalar-List-Utils-1.45,1.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-DateTime-Locale-1.05.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-DateTime-1.34.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-DateTime-HiRes-0.01_1.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-Crypt-CBC-2.33_1.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-Crypt-DES-2.07_1.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-Net-SNMP-6.0.1_1.txz pkg add http://pkg.freebsd.org/freebsd:10:x86:32/latest/All/p5-URI-1.71.txz
jimp: Maybe its possible to spend some cpu power for compiling pfsense packages ? I see it exact as you, best solution is to serve the most used packages by pfsense repo.
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One idea we toyed with was building a full set of packages so it would just pull them all from us. I'm not sure if that's still on the table, but it would solve all of these problems. The only downside would be the massive cpu time it would take to pull that off.
I think this needs to be done.
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How much CPU power are we talking about here for a 1-time compile ? Will 31 days of access to a single 'Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-2600 CPU @ 3.40GHz' node be sufficient ? Or is that peanuts in comparison with what is needed ?
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It can't just be one time. It has to be continual as any piece changes. There are security and other important updates in the ports tree from FreeBSD all the time.
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That's understandable of course. However, I was more looking for a (rough) estimate as we could use that estimate to determine let's say, CPU time for a 1-time compile of all software and use that information to roughly extrapolate it to determine CPU time for the worst-case scenario of (re-)compiling all software on a continuous basis, which should be enough I reckon as after a 1-time compile, updates won't take nearly as much CPU time as compiling software from scratch.