2016-03-05 6:44 GMT+01:00 stan <stanl-fedorauser@xxxxxxxxxxx>:
So it shouldn't be a problem to use the fedora packages directly. And
they would have the patches already.
Nope, the patches are not currently upstream and we don't have any release date.
I wonder if the qemu at virt-preview is a master package, that only
installs other packages. I'm not a packager, but I think there are
packages that are sort of like virtual functions.
what exactly is a master package? i googled it and didn't find any explanation
So, because you already have 2.5.0, you don't actually need to update
in order to patch?
Yes that's exactly this.
I think at this point you've exhausted me as a resource, and need
someone more knowledgeable. Because, what I would do would be to
download the fedora packages to the local machine (they're at 2.5.0-8),
and install them using the dnf -C upgrade command. That way, you get
the patches without any need to mess around with source packages. It
might mess up the virt-preview repo if you need it in future. But if
your system is running without the qemu package from virt-preview, you
don't need it, and can get back in sync with fedora. As a precaution,
you could get the binary packages for the qemu stuff you have installed
from virt-preview. And if you have to downgrade because the fedora
packages don't work, you could just do a dnf -C downgrade with those
packages.
But it is possible I don't really understand your issue, and that might
be the wrong thing to do.
Actually i could remove everything from virt-preview if i knew what's needed for libvirt to run, will probably end up doing this anyway but i hoped for more insight, was a bit worry to break my system.
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