On Fri, 06 Apr 2012 12:41:35 -0300 Gerardo Exequiel Pozzi <[email protected]> wrote:
> On 04/06/2012 12:12 PM, Dieter Plaetinck wrote: > > On Fri, 06 Apr 2012 11:48:27 -0300 > > Gerardo Exequiel Pozzi<[email protected]> wrote: > > > >> On 04/06/2012 11:24 AM, Dieter Plaetinck wrote: > >>> in the releng env > >>> (http://projects.archlinux.org/users/dieter/releng.git/tree/) it seems the > >>> pacman.conf.{i686,x86_64} files are now being ignored. (i enabled testing > >>> in there but it's not used) > >>> Frankly I don't even know/remember how this ever worked, I can't find a > >>> reference to these files anywhere. > >>> How does one control which pacman.conf archiso must use during building > >>> of the arch environment it puts on the isos? > >>> > >>> Dieter > >>> > >> I do not know about how these scripts works, the only thing that I can > >> say is about archiso: > >> build.sh (wrapper to mkarchiso) does not have a parameter to set a > >> pacman.conf, so mkarchiso by default will use /etc/pacman.conf. > > has this always been like this? > Yes, never used neither in the age of Makefile instead of build.sh. At > some point we used a local copy of pacman.conf in overlay (unmodified > from pacman package when mkarchroot does not support NOCOPY) > > > >> Can you point me where is supposed to be used these files in > >> releng-scripts? I can not found any references in the tree. > >> > > exactly, that's what I said. I don't know where these files are ever used. > > They should be used when building the iso's. > > > Weird. sure? > > But think that these files are never used, because: > > They are out-of-date (compared to newer pacman.conf) -> There are no > "SigLevel" -> Default "SigLevel" is used, that is "Optional TrustedOnly" > by pacman-4 -> without manual interaction pacman will not work. -> no ISOs. > > But we have ISOs all times :) Or I am missing something? > these files date back to back when Gerhard and I were working on the env. I.e. multiple years ago. At some point, they must have been used for something.
