Well, from what I've seen on the list most people use the tools to see what will be cleaned out before they actually do it and that seems to work fairly well. Not the best but they're trying to make it bettter.
I've had Gentoo running for over a year and really haven't seen the growth you're worried about. However, on my RPM systems I kept having to add stuff because of all the dependencies and ended up with a bunch of junk that I didn't need but was afraid to get rid of once it was there! On Thursday 20 November 2003 19:37, you wrote: > On Fri, Nov 21, 2003 at 07:41:30AM +0800, William Kenworthy wrote: > > I suspect that the "rationale" that this has gone on so long is that its > > hardly critical. nice yes, a mild limitation yes, but it wont stop your > > system working, or have dire (note I say dire, not theoretical) security > > consequences to have a little fluff left on a system. The system may > > grow, but only so far. I dont believe rpm handles dependencies all that > > well either (else why do you get into dependency hell so often with > > them!) > > The difference here is that when using RPM, it is painful because it won't > let you do operations that will break runtime dependencies, which means > doing things in an order that RPM will allow. emerge, on the other hand, > is painful because it will happily allow you to irreparably damage your > system, and it provides no mechanism for figuring out what is dangerous and > what isn't. > > Jason -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
