On Fri, Oct 13, 2006 at 11:49:50AM +0200, Stefan Dirsch wrote:
On Fri, Oct 13, 2006 at 10:36:30AM +0200, Stefan Dirsch wrote:
On Fri, Oct 13, 2006 at 10:28:08AM +0200, Adrian Schröter wrote:
Am Friday 13 October 2006 10:06 schrieb Stefan Dirsch:
On Fri, Oct 13, 2006 at 09:45:35AM +0200, Stefan Dirsch wrote:
On Thu, Oct 12, 2006 at 05:54:56PM +0200, Adrian Schröter wrote:
the build service now runs via iChain. This means that you need to use your bugzilla/www.opensuse.org password from now on.
The command line users need also to update the osc tool to version 0.9 to get access to it again.
Unfortunately this doesnn't work for me, e.g.
sndirsch@shannon:~/pkgs/openSUSE/games:action/xmoto> osc ci Error: can't get 'http://api.opensuse.org/source/games:action/xmoto' HTTP Error 400: Bad Request
I'm using osc-0.9-5.1. Latest changelog entry.
* Do Okt 12 2006 - poeml@suse.de - update to 0.9 (r761): [...]
user/pass in ~/.oscrc is set correctly.
osc st/diff work. Anyone, who can reproduce this problem?
Since adding/removing/editing files via the BS website works I think this is an osc issue.
Does it help to add
scheme: https
in ~/.oscrc below the [general] section ?
Not at all. :-( My ~/.oscrc:
# use this API server # (it needs a section [api.opensuse.org] with the credentials) #apisrv = api.opensuse.org scheme: https
[api.opensuse.org] user = sndirsch pass = XXXXXXXXXXX
Peter, can you make https to be the default ?
Yes. I thought I already did so this morning, after I noticed that it no longer worked (last night the testsuite ran fine) -- but being in a hurry I did the change in the wrong place. Meanwhile I have corrected it, and almost all new osc packages are built by now.
Looks like he already did, but this version doesn't work either for me. :-(
The problem is limited to machine 'shannon' and/or the current (python?) packages from STABLE.
Ah, thanks for finding that out. Probably a bug in python or python-urlgrabber then. Regards, Peter -- SUSE LINUX Products GmbH Bug, bogey, bugbear, bugaboo: Research & Development A malevolent monster (not true?); Some mischief microbic; What makes someone phobic; The work one does not want to do. From: Chris Young (The Omnificent English Dictionary In Limerick Form)