>>>>> "MG" == Martin Gansser <linux4martin@xxxxxx> writes: MG> The *.language files are also locale files in common sense, but MG> find_lang isn't able to handle them. I guess you could try passing --all-name and see if it finds anything. I don't think it will help, though. And if it doesn't, then don't use %find_lang. If it doesn't work for your situation, you can always just list the files out normally. %find_lang is simply a really huge convenience in the vast majority of cases. Yes, the guidelines say you _must_ use %find_lang: https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Packaging:Guidelines#Why_do_we_need_to_use_.25find_lang.3F but, hey, if it doesn't actually work because the files you're trying to use aren't "locale" files according to %find_lang, then do what you have to do. Certainly add comments to your spec indicating why %find_lang doesn't work, and maybe file a bug against rpm explaining the situation. %find_lang just calls /usr/lib/rpm/find-lang.sh and it should be trivial to add another option to process the files you have (assuming you can actually understand find-lang.sh, which is.... not particularly easy to follow. You could also run your own script to do it directly (copied and modified from find-lang.sh) if you don't like listing out all of the files directly. - J< -- packaging mailing list packaging@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/packaging