Am 11.12.2017 um 22:21 schrieb Dominique Leuenberger / DimStar:
On Mon, 2017-12-11 at 22:02 +0100, Stefan Seyfried wrote:
Still no - the only valid mmethod is to modify systemd-preset- branding- openSUSE
What about systemd-presets-branding-CAASP?
It depends: would you expect bluez to be enabled inside Kubic? (probably not)
Yes. It needs to be enabled always, or it will not work. If is is not enabled, then it cannot be started on-demand by whatever bluetooth applet is installed. Kubic is this KDE live cd? I think they want to have bluetooth working. Ah, i see. Kubic is a container. I would not expect bluez being installed at all in such a hipster-playground ;-)
this is the ONLY package that should bring default states for services for openSUSE.
So who will fix this package?
You can create a submit request for your bits / pieces
And i need to require it from bluez? To make sure that users cannot install What about systemd-presets-branding-CAASP?
Nope - it is, like any other 'branding' package, the DISTROs responsibility to pull in its own branding package. This allows us to use the same RPM (e.g. bluez.rpm) across distros and have various flavors that can decide on their own about what servcies they want/need to enable out of the box.
Yes. But bluez will not work as intended if it is not enabled. (You and Frederic found this out in boo#796671 and opted against presets-branding-openSUSE, because it is not good enough). So the user selects another branding package and -- boom, bluez does not work anymore.
No service / package is allowed to set its 'default enabled value' by bypassing the distro while being part of the distro.>> Ok, then it's mkdir -p / ln -s. I meand "systemctl enable foo.service" is not exactly rocket science after all.
Sure - and this split was never done for 'simplicity' reason, bot for 'central point of definition what service a default distro installation gets enabled'
But it does not make any sense to ever have this disabled if the bluez package is installed. Unless the admin does not want to have it (but then "rpm -e" is probably what she wants to do).
as said above: it should not be the RPM's scripts choice if a service is enabled by default or not, this is a 'overall distro choice' (of course in openSUSE the contributors are the ones to define the list in the end> Does that clarify things?
No, because it does not apply to this package. There is no choice if we want this enabled or not. Unless we deliberately choose to "we don't want it to work". Anyway, I removed the Requires(post): systemd and substituted it with coreutils. -- Stefan Seyfried "For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for nature cannot be fooled." -- Richard Feynman -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-packaging+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-packaging+owner@opensuse.org