On Tue, 2009-07-14 at 18:39 +0200, Michael Schwendt wrote: > On Tue, 14 Jul 2009 19:08:49 +0300, Jussi wrote: > > > On Tue, 2009-07-14 at 17:23 +0200, Michael Schwendt wrote: > > > > Say I've built foo-1-1 in rawhide a year ago and thus the package is > > > > available now in F-10 and F-11. How do I update to foo-2-1 in both > > > > distros? > > > > > > Whether with %dist or not, doesn't make a difference. You commit the > > > upgrade to the branch that previously targeted rawhide. F-10 in your > > > example. > > > > And it automatically ends up in F-11? > > With koji inheritance, yes. > > > I can't tag and build for F-11 if > > the tag with same EVR already exists in F-10. > > We're not talking about the same thing. Or to put it differently, you want > to prove something to me which I don't find relevant in this discussion. I just don't understand the build system well enough yet to know how this works. I agree that for packages that only contain stuff that is going to be the same on every architecture and distribution (such as packages consisting of PDF files) not using the %{?dist} tag is sane. The question about rpm internals changing is related to this, but is a separate issue. IMHO one should be able to tag&build noarch packages for multiple distributions at once to cope with the changes in rpm. However, packages that are compiled in some way *really should* use the %{?dist} tag, since that way they are upgraded when the distribution is upgraded. (Or it can be easily seen that the compilation is obsolete.) -- Jussi Lehtola Fedora Project Contributor jussilehtola@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx -- fedora-devel-list mailing list fedora-devel-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-devel-list