"Gregory L. White"
A most important feature of SPITBOL is that the machine state can be saved at any given time, for re-execution at the point it exited. For example, in one of my extreme-strength encryption engines, I would not want to travel for years or months etc., to get to the same point. Regards,
Greg
Greg, Opensuse lays claim of the most open of all distros. Meaning you can easily get an account at build.opensuse.org (obs) and create a package for spitbol in your home project, then submit that to a devel project, then submit it to factory from the devel package. From factory it automatically ends up in the next major release. You have to have a open license of course for the above to be possible. (Lots of allowed licenses, but also lots of dis-allowed licenses so this can be a real hurdle). If spitbol compiles cleanly, someone who knows obs could get the home project package created and built in under 30 minutes easy. The submissions take longer because someone has to review and accept the package. Legal review for non-open licensing often takes the longest, but that doesn't happen until the factory step. Opensuse 12.2 has already been split off from factory, so 12.3 (12.2+1) is your first real option. In the meantime, obs has a formal rpm publishing mechanism that lets opensuse users install rpms directly from devel projects, or even home projects. If this sounds like too much work, you could post a message about spitbol to opensuse-packaging (or opensuse-factory) and ask if anyone would be willing to do the above for you. We call that being a package maintainer. Good luck Greg -- Sent from my Android phone with K-9 Mail. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org