We'll only got for rpm? deb packaging?

Regards
Ilias

On 6 October 2017 at 20:18, Maxim Uvarov <maxim.uva...@linaro.org> wrote:

> http://pkgs.fedoraproject.org/cgit/rpms/dpdk.git/tree/dpdk.spec
>
> On 6 October 2017 at 20:17, Maxim Uvarov <maxim.uva...@linaro.org> wrote:
>
> >
> >
> > On 6 October 2017 at 20:05, Honnappa Nagarahalli <
> > honnappa.nagaraha...@linaro.org> wrote:
> >
> >> Any experts on how is the packaging done for DPDK?
> >>
> >>
> > ./pkg/dpdk.spec  ?
> >
> >
> >> On 6 October 2017 at 08:36, Savolainen, Petri (Nokia - FI/Espoo)
> >> <petri.savolai...@nokia.com> wrote:
> >> >> > No, I'm pointing that the more there's common core SW, the more
> there
> >> >> > are trade-offs and the less direct HW access == less  performance.
> >> For
> >> >> > optimal performance, the amount of common core SW is zero.
> >> >>
> >> >> Yes this is sort of the ideal but I doubt this type of installation
> >> >> will be accepted by e.g. Red Hat for inclusion in server-oriented
> >> >> Linux distributions. Jon Masters seems to be strongly against this
> >> >> (although I have only heard this second hand). So that's why I
> >> >> proposed the common (generic) core + platform specific drivers model
> >> >> that is used by e.g. Xorg and DPDK. Since DPDK is actually a user
> >> >> space framework (unlike Xorg), this should be a good model for ODP
> and
> >> >> something that Red Hat cannot object against.
> >> >>
> >> >
> >> > If every line of code is maintained properly, why a distro would care
> >> about the ratio between common core SW and HW specific driver SW?
> >> >
> >> > If they care, what is an acceptable ratio? Is it 90% common SW : 10%
> HW
> >> specific SW, 80:20, 50:50, 10:90 and why not 0:100? How this ratio
> should
> >> be calculated?
> >> >
> >> > DPDK is in Ubuntu already. Have anyone calculated what this ratio is
> >> for it?
> >> >
> >> > I'd be interested to see ODP as part of any distro first, and only
> >> after that speculate what other distros may or may not say. E.g. Ubuntu
> >> seem to accept  packages that are only for single arch, e.g.:
> >> > librte-pmd-fm10k17.05 (= 17.05.2-0ubuntu1) [amd64, i386]  <<< Intel
> Red
> >> Rock Canyon net driver, provided only for x86
> >> >
> >> > -Petri
> >> >
> >> >
> >>
> >
> >
>

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