On 11/13/2009 05:19 AM, Fernando Lopez-Lezcano wrote:
Where do I find the open build servers in Fedora / RPMFusion? By open
build (with openSUSE) you can create one or more projects on
openSUSE's server and the server is used to compile the sources based
on your configuration settings.
If you mean rpm .spec files then yes it's similar.
However, you can not be any random hacker/cracker of the street ;-)
You create a .spec for the thing you want to package, and submit a
review request. In time, one or more reviewers help you to knock the
spec into a form where it meets the fedora / rpm fusion packaging
guidelines.
At this point, they also request that you perform pre-reviews of other
packager's efforts. This is to show that you understand the process and
guidelines (in your case, consider some other music packages - ie
similar interest). At this stage an overseeing sponsor takes a look at
your package Review request and decides if you have learnt enough to be
accepted as a packager.
It isn't that hard; but it is a little more difficult that extract,
config, make, make install. The final result must: work on multiple
architectures, be able to build from source, and fit with packaging
guidelines which aim to stop packages stepping on each other's toes.
Whilst the input of the data and the
configuration of the project takes time their seems to be an advantage
in that the different architectures can be compiled in one run.
Yes, Fedora and RPM Fusion build requests do builds for multiple
supported arch (i686, x86_64, ppc). There are other build servers for
less commmon architectures like s390x and arm.
In the case of Fedora you have to become a contributor:
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Join
and more specifically:
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Join_the_package_collection_maintainers
I presume the process is similar on RPMFusion.
In fact, once you have become a packager for Fedora, you need to create
yourself a fas account in RPM Fusion, then submit your Review Request,
mentioning that you are already a Fedora packager.
Please query in your Review Request, and on an appropriate list when you
need help. You might like to review both bugzilla.redhat.com and
bugzilla.rpmfusion.org searching for music related packages, that you
might be able to help review ...
DaveT (now I've got GUI on an F12 rc install, I might have a chance at
getting audacity to build and work out what's going wrong) ;-0
_______________________________________________
Fedora-music-list mailing list
Fedora-music-list@xxxxxxxxxx
http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-music-list