Am 20.02.20 um 17:00 schrieb Michael Matz:
Yes. My point is that this is not a good state of affairs. If the respective package containing the manpage is installed by default together with the main package (as was the case most of those 13 years for bash), it doesn't matter as much. But if it's not installed anymore by default I consider this a quality-of-implementation bug.
(Note that for command line programs I specifically make a difference between man-pages (plus perhaps info-pages in some cases) and all other documentation (which e.g. bash has as well)).
We can still have the documentation pattern being installed by default on a regular install. But what Ludwig is rightfully aiming at is breaking with the 'one solution for all' - what is right for the system you're working on is not necessarily right for the system you run your crypto miner on. And disabling recommends is a very big hammer - and --excludedocs is a crude workaround only applicable in some situations. Greetings, Stephan -- Lighten up, just enjoy life, smile more, laugh more, and don't get so worked up about things. Kenneth Branagh -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-packaging+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-packaging+owner@opensuse.org