On 13/03/2019 07:28, Martin Wilck wrote:
On Tue, 2019-03-12 at 15:51 +0100, Stephan Kulow wrote:
On 3/12/19 3:41 PM, Ludwig Nussel wrote:
The longer this thread evolves, the more I wonder how a decision could be reached. But I do think we need one. Otherwise we'll waste energy in pointless races where some people remove bashisms and others introduce new ones. We all have better things to do.
I can't see a consensus reached in this discussion. Yet, a request to put /bin/sh under control of update-alternatives is on the way to Factory. So just creating facts.
Which is perfect! https://media.ccc.de/v/1912-opensuse-is-what-you-make-it
No it is not. A public discussion which was by no means settled is being ended the hard way, "creating facts". I can't imagine that that's what Richard meant. This "solution" is thoroughly lacking the "human touch" that Richard mentioned in his talk. It's also highly doubtful whether everyone involved in the discussion "feels they were heard". I, personally, do not. My key point in the discussion was that we need to settle on a unique, well-defined, existing shell with which scripts can be tested for compliance. After this change, we have the opposite. /bin/sh is now a black box that behaves "posix compliant" in some weakly defined way. Scripts may work, or they may not - no reliable way to find out.
What I least understand is that this massive change is being rushed to factory in less than 2 weeks, while other things keep lurking in home projects or devel projects for ages. For example, in the course of this discussion, I'd been trying to help XRevan86 to get a working version of "checkbashisms" into factory, but so far it hasn't even received a devel project review ( https://build.opensuse.org/request/show/662123).
That was my approach to the subject, take some small steps, evaluate benefits, risks, and challenges, and then flip the switch (or not). But the big axe seems to be preferred. Well then. I've learned a not-so- nice lesson about openSUSE today.
I probably sound like a sore looser. Perhaps I am, although I'm not strongly on one side of the "pro-and-contra bash" discussion. I understand the "openSUSE is what you make it" mantra. But I dislike the way it's bluntly being applied here.
I tend to agree, with Martin here, I don't think such a change should be made until we can guarantee things wont break, and we can't do that until there is a way for packagers like me who have never cared what is / isn't a bashism to know they are breaking something as part of the buildsystem.
I would request that those who are making such SR's stop until there is checks for bashism's as part of the buildsystem, otherwise i'll raise it to the board, as quite clearly at the moment the objections / concerns raised in the discussions on this list are not being taken into account in the current submissions.
While I am generally ok with people making this change if they would like to I think it needs to be done right, and the current submission is not doing it right. Though not affected myself, I tend to agree with Martin as well. What about an
Op dinsdag 12 maart 2019 22:58:07 CET schreef Simon Lees: option in the installer "Preferred shell" ? Make bash default, but offer ( and install, when changed ) other shells? -- Gertjan Lettink a.k.a. Knurpht openSUSE Board Member openSUSE Forums Team -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-factory+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-factory+owner@opensuse.org