pkg upgrade, never attempt to use the terrible option! Even think of using it!If you need something reliable, don't use KDE.
always check what pkg intends to upgrade or remove and if in doubt, check for fallout/build errors for the affected packages on freshports.
DON'T BLINDLY HIT "Y" KEY ON UPGRADES!
Always confirm carefully to see there are no unintentional deletions before hitting "y" on upgrades.
If you're specifying "-y" option forpkg upgrade, never attempt to use the terrible option! Even think of using it!
The option is only for managed environments that admins are managing local repository and putting safe-to-upgrading things into the local repo.
Otherwise, the option could be catastrophic!
Unfortunately, it's not specific for latest.I swear, almost every "X package got deleted!!!!" post would not be needed if people were using Quarterly.
creation/updating of ports repositories is an atomic operation with poudriere. otherwise it would be a constant hell of dependency issues.previous versions are deleted but the upgraded ones are not yet finished building.
It's a completely linux-centric (to put it *very* mildly) project with WAY too many moving parts and dependencies that are often heavily linux-specific. While for most developers in the UNIX (i.e. BSD, solaris/illumos) world "production safe first" is still a thing, the first rule of development in linux-land for many years has been "break stuff, maybe fix later (but it runs on my laptop, so I don't care), but push as many new versions per week as possible". And if you don't run systemd/linux your bug reports are usually invalid to them anyways.I find this conclusion dead wrong.
And this is the issue I've mentioned.every port that couldn't be built for whatever reason is missing from packages - short and simple.