Hello...
On Mon, 2009-09-28 at 22:16 +0200, Steve Traylen wrote: > On Fri, Sep 25, 2009 at 4:10 AM, Mike McGrath <[email protected]> wrote: > > On Tue, 22 Sep 2009, Manuel Wolfshant wrote: > > > >> On 09/22/2009 01:46 AM, Christopher wrote: > >> > [...] > >> > So, what is the consensus on updating core perl modules? > >> that's a no-no > >> > > > > ugh, what a painful problem. Why can't all this stuff just be easy :) > > Seems like stuff like this might have to wait until RHEL6. > > > > Assuming there is one and it does not contain any security holes > then can an older Yahoo-Marketing module be built and added > to EPEL. > It might be possible, but I think this case is similar to something like clamav versions. At least in our local case, when yahoo adds API functionality, you frequently need to get the latest perl module version to use that new API. Hence we are almost always at the latest version, plus whatever it requires. > It seems reasonable to me. I am interested in the general case > as well as this one since I have a similar item with something I wish > to add. > For the general case of getting newer versions of modules that are in the perl core rpm, all I could find was this: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/SIGs/Perl How to update core perl modules? Use the site_perl dirs? /usr/local dirs? Problems with man pages conflicts, version provides clashes (can cause strange problems during package upgrades), .... /me uses ... MAN1EXT=1cpan MAN3EXT=3cpan ... in the build portion <side bit> I am also trying to build up some other perl modules we use into fedora. As odd as it sounds, I don't have a good place to publicly post the .spec files. http://fedorapeople.org/ would work, but I need to be in a SIG like EPEL which requires being sponsored, (hint, my FAS id is chrismcc :) . </side bit> For everyone: Would, for example, building all the BuildRequires for perl-Yahoo-Marketing and the module itself within koji, then posting the five or so resulting rpms in a small yum repo on fedorapeople be an acceptable solution? Then users could always get the latest versions either for Fedora Latest or for RHEL, built via EPEL, but not in EPEL proper. <snip> -- Christopher McCrory "The guy that keeps the servers running" [email protected] http://www.pricegrabber.com Let's face it, there's no Hollow Earth, no robots, and no 'mute rays.' And even if there were, waxed paper is no defense. I tried it. Only tinfoil works. _______________________________________________ epel-devel-list mailing list [email protected] https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/epel-devel-list
