freebsd-nq/share/examples/cvsup/secure-cvs-supfile

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# $FreeBSD$
#
# This file contains all of the "CVSup collections" that make up the CVS
# development tree of the FreeBSD international secure distribution. If
# you are outside the USA or Canada, use this file.
#
# CVSup (CVS Update Protocol) allows you to download the latest CVS
# tree (or any branch of development therefrom) to your system easily
# and efficiently (far more so than with sup, which CVSup is aimed
# at replacing). If you're running CVSup interactively, and are
# currently using an X display server, you should run CVSup as follows
# to keep your CVS tree up-to-date:
#
# cvsup secure-cvs-supfile
#
# If not running X, or invoking cvsup from a non-interactive script, then
# run it as follows:
#
# cvsup -g -L 2 secure-cvs-supfile
#
# You may wish to change some of the settings in this file to better
# suit your system:
#
# base=/usr
# This specifies the root where CVSup will store information
# about the collections you have transferred to your system.
# A setting of "/usr" will generate this information in
# /usr/sup. Even if you are CVSupping a large number of
# collections, you will be hard pressed to generate more than
# ~1MB of data in this directory. You can override the
# "base" setting on the command line with cvsup's "-b base"
# option. This directory must exist in order to run CVSup.
#
# prefix=/home/ncvs
# This specifies where to place the requested files. A
# setting of "/home/ncvs" will place all of the files
# requested in /home/ncvs (e.g., "/home/ncvs/src/bin",
# "/home/ncvs/ports/archivers"). The prefix directory
# must exist in order to run CVSup.
# Defaults that apply to all the collections
*default host=cvsup.internat.FreeBSD.org
*default base=/usr
*default prefix=/home/ncvs
*default release=cvs
*default delete use-rel-suffix
# If your network link is a T1 or faster, comment out the following line.
*default compress
## The international secure collections.
src-eBones
src-secure