Jesse Keating wrote:
Yes, because then we can prune more efficiently. As each binary distribution is pruned, we can prune that specific reference to a source package. If no more binary distributions exist with references to the source package, then the actual file on the file system goes away. There may be many interim updates that don't ever get included in any binary distribution (other than our updates directory) and would be pruned out automatically when the update is superseded.
On the other hand you rely on downstream to tell you when it is OK for them to have you purge the binary (as well as the sources) all and all not making it very manageable or even sustainable in the long run. Committing to provide the sources for a given period of time however let's you crontab a 'find -exec', leaving any "real responsibility" to downstream; far more efficient and way more manageable for us, good enough for anyone else.
BTW, these interim updates, builds or even CVS commits are not released effectively -like you said they are never included in any binary distribution. I'm thinking these got included in the bigger picture somehow, while I was just talking about released updates (possibly including updates-testing) -nothing more, not even development/.
Kind regards, Jeroen van Meeuwen -kanarip _______________________________________________ fedora-advisory-board mailing list fedora-advisory-board@xxxxxxxxxx http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-advisory-board