On Fri, 02 Nov 2007 13:42:55 +0100, Ralf Corsepius wrote: > C'mon, you are once more trying to push people to adopt your (IMO: > broken) vision. Ridiculous. Actually, it's the opposite. I'm not the one who's fighting the use of scripts like upgradecheck, just because some of its (not even daily) mails are considered an annoyance by a few package maintainers. Take a deep breath, mash warns about broken deps in rawhide every day, even when a packager can only wait for another packager to fix something first. It's not even my script (except for contributions). If some committee rules that the script must not be run anymore because packagers complain about it, I've learnt to not care anymore. I draw my conclusions and move on. Why spend time on stuff that's not appreciated? But I distinguish between people, who think about improving the checks (or who suggest improvements), and people who put most of their energy into pointing out there negative views. Previously, when F7 updates-testing became mandatory, more maintainers have requested to not ignore updates-testing in the checks. Some of the scripts have saved many a packager's ass -- and more than once. Broken upgrade paths have caused nasty soname/deps breakage during dist upgrades before. > - If a package is being pushed from testing to updates (currenly not > possible due to bodhi's design), ?? What do you mean? How have the many packagers done it? Marking a test update "stable" does work, doesn't it? Do you see a pattern in the way you criticise achievements? You focus on any flaws you see, totally ignoring the positive rest that has been real progress. > Example: "Package X works in FC-8 but doesn't work in FC-7". If it works, why isn't it put into F-8 (or devel)? I can answer that for you. Case 1) The usual procedure is that the packager still focuses on F-7 and does not use F-8/rawhide yet. The update is prepared for F-7 only, neglecting F-8/rawhide completely. Case 2) The usual %{?dist} and "make tag" breakage. Wrong release bumps as the cause of broken upgrade paths. Case 3) You refer to an already released pkg in F-7 and F-8, which is reported as being broken in F-7 only. Let's assume you prepare a version upgrade as a test update for F-7, not testing the same code for F-8 or devel. You try to cherry-pick your target audience by releasing an exclusive test upgrade for an old(er) dist, neglecting to test the same stuff for the newer dists. What is so wrong about warning about the broken upgrade path? Especially when you learn that the test update works for F-7, you need to bring F-8 and devel on par with F-7 anyway. > => People start addressing the FC-7 issue by building packages for FC-7 > and want their FC-7 audience to test their attempts. FC-8 is completely > irrelevant at this point. It isn't, because if the test environments are so much different that one dist malfunctions while the other doesn't, you need to test the updates for both dists and not just for one. --- WARNING --- Just for Ralf, the next upgradecheck report [send to this list only] will exclude F-7 updates-testing. Have fun drawing *your* own conclusions. :-/ -- fedora-devel-list mailing list fedora-devel-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-devel-list