I have just implemented some changes for the various factory targets of devel:languages:python. Most importantly, the openSUSE_Factory_ARM, openSUSE_Factory_PowerPC, and openSUSE_Factory_zSystems build targets have been rolled into the openSUSE_Tumbleweed build target. They are now architectures of openSUSE_Tumbleweed rather than stand-alone repositories. The existing repositories are still there. Assuming there are no problems they will be disabled on in 2 days (Sunday, April 2) and will be deleted in one week (Friday, April 7 2017).
Second, the opensuse_factory_staging build target has already been deleted. It was purely a testing repository, so nobody should have been using it to begin with.
Thank you, Todd
On 31/03/2017 20:57, Todd Rme wrote:
I have just implemented some changes for the various factory targets of devel:languages:python. Most importantly, the openSUSE_Factory_ARM, openSUSE_Factory_PowerPC, and openSUSE_Factory_zSystems build targets have been rolled into the openSUSE_Tumbleweed build target. They are now architectures of openSUSE_Tumbleweed rather than stand-alone repositories. The existing repositories are still there. Assuming there are no problems they will be disabled on in 2 days (Sunday, April 2) and will be deleted in one week (Friday, April 7 2017).
Second, the opensuse_factory_staging build target has already been deleted. It was purely a testing repository, so nobody should have been using it to begin with.
Thank you, Todd
Hopefully that doesn't include openSUSE:Factory:Staging:Gcc7? Dave P
On Sat, Apr 1, 2017 at 3:25 AM, Dave Plater dplater.list@gmail.com wrote:
On 31/03/2017 20:57, Todd Rme wrote:
I have just implemented some changes for the various factory targets of devel:languages:python. Most importantly, the openSUSE_Factory_ARM, openSUSE_Factory_PowerPC, and openSUSE_Factory_zSystems build targets have been rolled into the openSUSE_Tumbleweed build target. They are now architectures of openSUSE_Tumbleweed rather than stand-alone repositories. The existing repositories are still there. Assuming there are no problems they will be disabled on in 2 days (Sunday, April 2) and will be deleted in one week (Friday, April 7 2017).
Second, the opensuse_factory_staging build target has already been deleted. It was purely a testing repository, so nobody should have been using it to begin with.
Thank you, Todd
Hopefully that doesn't include openSUSE:Factory:Staging:Gcc7? Dave P
This is only for the devel:languages:python repository. It doesn't have that build target.
Am 31.03.2017 um 20:57 schrieb Todd Rme:
I have just implemented some changes for the various factory targets of devel:languages:python. Most importantly, the openSUSE_Factory_ARM, openSUSE_Factory_PowerPC, and openSUSE_Factory_zSystems build targets have been rolled into the openSUSE_Tumbleweed build target. They are now architectures of openSUSE_Tumbleweed rather than stand-alone repositories. The existing repositories are still there. Assuming there are no problems they will be disabled on in 2 days (Sunday, April 2) and will be deleted in one week (Friday, April 7 2017).
That does not seem like a very clever idea to me, as this changes the package search order, giving Factory a higher priority than the ports.
Regards, Andreas
I have reverted the change. It caused problems with the noarch packages.
On Fri, Mar 31, 2017 at 2:57 PM, Todd Rme toddrme2178@gmail.com wrote:
I have just implemented some changes for the various factory targets of devel:languages:python. Most importantly, the openSUSE_Factory_ARM, openSUSE_Factory_PowerPC, and openSUSE_Factory_zSystems build targets have been rolled into the openSUSE_Tumbleweed build target. They are now architectures of openSUSE_Tumbleweed rather than stand-alone repositories. The existing repositories are still there. Assuming there are no problems they will be disabled on in 2 days (Sunday, April 2) and will be deleted in one week (Friday, April 7 2017).
Second, the opensuse_factory_staging build target has already been deleted. It was purely a testing repository, so nobody should have been using it to begin with.
Thank you, Todd