On Tuesday 01 February 2011 03:45:37 Greg KH wrote:
On Tue, Feb 01, 2011 at 03:06:01AM +0100, Jos Poortvliet wrote:
On Monday 31 January 2011 19:45:32 Greg KH wrote:
On Mon, Jan 31, 2011 at 06:41:34PM +0100, Jos Poortvliet wrote:
Hi all,
I have some questions about Tumbleweed.
First of all, I wonder what the status is and will be. If someone enables Tumbleweed on the upcoming 11.4, is it very likely that most packages will be updated or are we still talking about a small subset?
I'm still working through this, but it looks like _every_ package will be updated to start with. That's the safest way to get all of the dependancies correct for any future changes that will be needed.
Ok, that's from moving from 11.3 to 11.4, yes? So from 11.4 onwards, are all maintainers going to pick packages for Tumbleweed?
I don't understand, what do you mean by "maintainers going to pick packages"?
What it looks like is going to happen is the WHOLE 11.4 repo will be linked into the openSUSE:Tumbleweed repo and rebuilt. So, if you switch to Tumbleweed, you will end up installing everything again.
Yes, once 11.4 is out. But I would like to know what happens after that - going towards 11.5/12.0? How many packages are 'part of the Tumbleweed initiative', IOW, being kept up to date? How many maintainers have said they will send regular new versions your way? Eg just the kernel, Xorg and GNOME? Or also LibreOffice, Firefox? is XFCE in? Will we have the latest Wireshark? Python packages? ;-)
Yeah, it's a pain, but it seems like the best way forward at the moment.
And yes, there are alternatives, only picking the packages that change, _and_ the dependancies, and linking them in. But, that will start to drive me crazy very quickly, as it has already when trying to do some updates in the testing repo.
But if people complain that this would be too much, we can do it, it's just more work on my part, which is fair enough.
Nah, I think it's not too bad for the 11.4 release, it's just a bigger download, that's it. Hurts us (our servers & bandwith) more than most of our users, I'd say. And Tumbleweed doesn't have that many yet, I would guess. We should however do better in the future - for someone living in a low-bandwith country like India or Brazil, an upgrade to 11.4 could take several days. And I feel that pain because I will be in Brazil during the release period ;-)
thanks,
greg k-h