It's an unrealistic thing. You always have ports that exit the compilation. If you restart portmaster with the remaining programs it compiles programs again, which it compiled just before. It's a "Sisyphos-work". (Notice: the second time I start not with
There are still ports clang can't compile (and other problems)
(the ports are: graphics/libcdr, print/libmspub*, textproc/libwps*, devel/boost-libs, graphics/libgltf, java/openjdk7, security/gnupg, graphics/goom - as far I know). I had in /etc/make.conf set to gcc48. Either portmaster makes nonsense or clang. This ports compiles in the port with gcc48 fine (or even with the change in /etc/make.conf, but not with portmaster (or clang).
portmaster -af. I am starting with portmaster "list-of-ports").There are still ports clang can't compile (and other problems)
(the ports are: graphics/libcdr, print/libmspub*, textproc/libwps*, devel/boost-libs, graphics/libgltf, java/openjdk7, security/gnupg, graphics/goom - as far I know). I had in /etc/make.conf set to gcc48. Either portmaster makes nonsense or clang. This ports compiles in the port with gcc48 fine (or even with the change in /etc/make.conf, but not with portmaster (or clang).