wiki:Migration

Version 70 (modified by whmagill, 9 years ago) (diff)

added emphasis on reinstalling Mac Ports package

Migrating a MacPorts install to a new major OS version or CPU architecture

An installation of MacPorts and the ports installed by it are only designed to work on a single OS release and a single CPU architecture. If you upgrade to a new OS version (e.g. from Leopard to Snow Leopard) or migrate to a new machine with a different type of CPU (e.g. PowerPC to Intel), you may get lucky and have your ports keep working, but in general, things will break. If you are only upgrading Xcode (e.g. 4.1 to 4.2 on Lion) but not the major OS version or CPU architecture, you do not need to reinstall ports as described below.

Reinstall Xcode

After performing either of these types of system upgrades, you will need to update the development tools. If you are upgrading from a prior version of OS X, install the latest version of Xcode for your new OS. This will not be done for you automatically; Xcode is not updated by Software Update, so you must update it manually.

Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard and earlier

You will find the Xcode installer on the Mac OS X installation DVD or on the Apple Developer web site.

OS X 10.7 Lion & OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion

Xcode is available for free on the Mac App Store (after install you also need to install "Command Line Tools": XCode->Preferences->Downloads; if upgrading from previous version of Xcode you may also need to do sudo xcode-select -switch /Applications/Xcode.app, see this SO article).

OS X 10.9 Mavericks & OS X 10.10 Yosemite

For minimum support of MacPorts, you need the Command Line Tools, which can be installed using xcode-select --install. If you are installing MacPorts from source, you will also want to run sudo xcodebuild -license.

Under Yosemite, "Software Update" no longer exists, rather one uses the "App Store" and enters "xcode" into the search box at the top right of the screen to find the latest version of Xcode. Once Xcode has been downloaded ( it is free) and installed via this method, it will appear in your "Purchases" tab, and updates will be provided until the NEXT major relaese of OSX or Xcode when you will have to search for the current version again.

IMPORTANT - Do Not Skip this step: Reinstall MacPorts

After updating the development tools, install the base MacPorts system for your new platform, either from the appropriate pkg or dmg file if already available or from source.

Update macports.conf

If your macports.conf contains uncommented settings for universal_archs or build_arch, you will likely want to update them, since unlike earlier OS versions, the compiler on Snow Leopard and later will build for x86_64 by default on systems that support it. The default values will be fine for almost all users, so unless you know you need something different, just comment out these two lines.

Several other settings in macports.conf have changed their defaults over the years. Take a moment to compare each line of your macports.conf with the corresponding line in macports.conf.default in the same directory. Unless you know a reason why a line your settings file should be different from the defaults, adopt the line from the defaults file.

Reinstall ports

To reinstall your ports:

  1. Save the list of installed ports:
    port -qv installed > myports.txt
    
  2. (optional) Save the list of requested ports:
    port echo requested | cut -d ' ' -f 1 > requested.txt
    
  3. Uninstall all installed ports:
    sudo port -f uninstall installed
    
  4. Clean any partially-completed builds:
    sudo port clean all
    
  5. Download and execute the restore_ports script. (If you installed MacPorts from source and put its Tcl package somewhere other than /Library/Tcl, then you'll need to use the -t option when you run restore_ports.tcl; see ./restore_ports.tcl -h.)
    curl -O https://svn.macports.org/repository/macports/contrib/restore_ports/restore_ports.tcl
    chmod +x restore_ports.tcl
    sudo ./restore_ports.tcl myports.txt
    
  6. (optional) Restore requested status: If you saved the list of requested ports, you can now restore the requested flags for your newly installed ports to their former states.
    sudo port unsetrequested installed
    < requested.txt xargs sudo port setrequested
    

Troubleshooting

Though it is now quite well-tested, the restore_ports script may fail in some cases. One known issue is that the script will fail if there are conflicting ports in the list. It's possible to have conflicting ports installed provided at most one of the conflicting set is active. If the script fails for this reason, you can delete one of the conflicting ports from myports.txt and then simply run the script again. You may need to do this multiple times if there are multiple conflicting ports listed.

In the worst case, you can reinstall your ports manually:

  1. Browse myports.txt and install the ports one by one, remembering to specify the appropriate variants:
    sudo port install portname +variant1 +variant2 …
    

Note that if you have specified variants which are not the default, you may need to install ports in an order other than the alphabetical order recorded in myports.txt. You may skip explicitly installing ports that you did not request as long as they are not using non-default variants, since they will be installed as dependencies of other ports.