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potuz Guru
Joined: 30 Jan 2010 Posts: 378
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Posted: Sat Jul 06, 2013 6:41 pm Post subject: Finding which files I've changed on an installed package |
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Hello list. Instead of bundling a new package I changed directly some perl modules on the root trew a few years ago (some minor things). All these files where instlaled by dev-perl/Finance-Quote. Is there a way of finding out which are these files I've changed? I somehow seem to remember that gentoolkit was able to do this. In this particular case I can extract the package and compare files, but in general, if I am to check files changed on an installation, is that possible?
EDIT: I guess I should've asked directly if the result of Code: | equery check Finance-Quote | are the only files changed?
Thanks. |
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dol-sen Retired Dev
Joined: 30 Jun 2002 Posts: 2805 Location: Richmond, BC, Canada
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Posted: Sat Jul 06, 2013 10:56 pm Post subject: |
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Yes, equery check reports any files installed by the pkg which do not match the md5sum or mtime of the installed package. You will have to check which files you actually modified for yourself. You will also have to figure out what changes were made from the original. _________________ Brian
Porthole, the Portage GUI frontend irc@freenode: #gentoo-guis, #porthole, Blog
layman, gentoolkit, CoreBuilder, esearch... |
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potuz Guru
Joined: 30 Jan 2010 Posts: 378
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Posted: Sat Jul 06, 2013 11:03 pm Post subject: |
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dol-sen wrote: | Yes, equery check reports any files installed by the pkg which do not match the md5sum or mtime of the installed package. You will have to check which files you actually modified for yourself. You will also have to figure out what changes were made from the original. |
Thanks, with that equery command and a simple diff over the original sources I found my changes. I wasn't sure if there could be some more... This took me a couple of hours to figure out but decided to do my own ebuild so that the next time I need to upgrade (which could be many years from now anyway) it's not so problematic. I'm not sure if it was worth my time given that this happens every once in a few years. |
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