As the guilty party in many cases for not updating the .rng file... Kevin Fenzi (kevin@xxxxxxxxx) said: > > The comps-el4.xml.in and comps-el5.xml.in changes remove a nearly > > empty <group> named "editors". The description claims that the group > > contains emacs and vi, but it doesn't. All it contains is an XEmacs > > metapkg. As an XEmacs developer, I am flattered that our product was > > included, but the current comps.rng knows nothing of <metapkg>. This > > looks like it was mistakenly included, or mistakenly not removed all > > the way, hence the removal. > > Seems fine. As Kevin said, EPEL groups are additive to RHEL groups; the descriptions are supposed to match what they are in RHEL/CentOS if they share the name of a group in EL. Hence, you can remove an empty 'editors' group, but I wouldn't change the description. > > In comps-epel7.xml.in, we currently have an <environment> prior to any > > <group>. That is not allowed by comps.rng, which wants all <group>s > > first, then <environment>s. This patch moves the <environment> to > > satisfy that restriction. But there is something odd here. That is > > the one and only <environment> in the file. Is this a mistake? > > Should there be <environment>s in comps-epel7.xml.in at all? If so, > > where are the rest of them? > > epel comps files are additive to rhel comps files. So, they will be > much smaller in general and not have any of the base env stuff. > I don't know off hand if rhel7 uses env's, but I think so. It does. > > In addition to the dangling "clustering" reference that started this > > thread, comps-f18.xml.in, comps-f19.xml.in, comps-f20.xml.in, > > comps-f21.xml.in, and comps-f22.xml.in all have a libreoffice group > > that is missing <default> and <uservisible> elements. i took my best > > guess at what the values of those elements should be. In addition, > > all but comps-f18.xml.in have a <group> named "3d-printing". However, > > that is not a valid ID, because it starts with a digit. I changed it > > to "three-d-printing", but somebody can probably come up with a better > > name than that. > > Fun. Please don't change group names in released releases - it's essentially an ABI for kickstart files, and we don't want to break those. I suspect the fix here is to change the definition to allow groups that start with a number - yum handles this OK. > > There are quite a few <packagereq> elements that do not carry a "type" > > attribute. It looks like comps.rng is supposed to support this, and > > that those elements are supposed to default to the type "optional". > > However, the "type" attribute has to be <optional> for that to work. It's not optional - having no type set makes the type 'mandatory'. From the yum code: genre = child.attrib.get('type') if not genre: genre = u'mandatory' The logic is that for groups that are used as building blocks of environments, they're not intended to be modified - so all packages are mandatory, and there are no optional/defualt ones. > > In the "core" group, there is a package declared like this: > > > > <packagereq arch="armhfp" > > type="mandatory">uboot-tools</packagereq> > > > > but comps.rng doesn't know anything about an "arch" attribute. > > Assuming that this is actually correct, and that consuming tools know > > to expect such an attribute, I added support for this to comps.rng. > > No idea here. Dennis and/or other arm folks might know more. yum doesn't use arch= here, but it's used by some tools that process comps files to write new ones. It's fine to add it to comps.rng. > > Finally, in some <environment>'s <optionlist>'s <groupid>s, a > > "default" attribute has appeared. The current comps.rng does not > > allow that. Once again, assuming that this is actually correct and > > that consuming tools expect that attribute, I added support for it. Yes, that's correct. Bill -- devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel Fedora Code of Conduct: http://fedoraproject.org/code-of-conduct