Hmm.. sounds a lot like FreeBSD's source and ports system (basically you do a cvs/cvsup of the source tree then go into the root directory of the source and do a make buildworld, after that go into single user and do a make installworld, building the kernel is very similar; ports is just a heirarchy of Makefiles that automatically fetch/configure/ install any given package for you, [i.e. cd /usr/ports/graphics/gimp1 ; make install]). It's something that I really like about FreeBSD and OpenBSD, and if LFSMake should take off, it would really make me think about running Linux on my home machine again. Eden Rod Roark wrote: > I guess this is a question of automation. My project LFSMake > (http://lfsmake.org/) is a start on that. There's also a very (perhaps > too) ambitious automation project getting started via one of the mailing > lists at linuxfromscratch.org. > > With LFSMake what you generally do for a new package release is change > the version number in the makefile (or get an updated makefile) and then > run the download and build commands again. How well that works will > depend on how much the volunteers can manage to stay on top of things. > > On the other hand, if you have a working system it's hardly necessary > to do upgrades every day. Also there's nothing to stop you from > installing your favorite package management system. > > -- Rod