Martin Michlmayr - Debian Project Leader [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
At the same time I observe that this thread has generated much hot
air, but I didn't see any proposal of who could act as DPL.
Please post the selection criteria for acceptance to the position of DAM.
The response If you don't
Adam Heath [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The byte compilation should be done when the package is built, not at runtime,
not at install time.
That doesn't work for languages that change their bytecode spec with
each version of their interpreter, and don't maintain backwards
compatibility.
--
Sam
Glenn McGrath [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
It could probably be done with HTTP, using cgi scripts (i dont know much
about this), that way standard clients can be used to retrieve pieces of
the Packages's file by putting the querry in the url.
And then you get the solution which has been mentioned
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm working on a diskless workstation configuration where I don't want
mailers running on each machine, though users may have access to the
mail spool through nfs. Is it appropriate for apt-get to coerce exim
to be installed when I only need a
Ivan E. Moore II [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
please tell me where I stated I would do the work for our users?
When you signed up as a Debian Developer.
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Sam Couter | Internet Engineer | http://www.topic.com.au/
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/dogmatic/
So was your message supposed to be serious, or are you just trolling?
[1]: http://www.sciencedaily.com/print/1999/03/990301072238.htm
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Sam Couter | Internet Engineer | http://www.topic.com.au/
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the daemon is started.
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Sam Couter | Internet Engineer | http://www.topic.com.au/
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Marcin Owsiany [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
No need to create a section for them. Birds can sit on the tree
directly.
But what about now that we have pools? Will they drown?
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Sam Couter | Internet Engineer | http://www.topic.com.au/
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be found in Compton's Encyclopedia Online at
http://www.comptons.com/encyclopedia/ARTICLES/0125/01443584_A.html
/pedant
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Sam Couter | Internet Engineer | http://www.topic.com.au/
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changes, debfoster will take notice, and
ask if you want to remove the old package.
.
This helps you to maintain a clean Debian install, without old
(mainly library) packages lying around that aren't used any more.
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Sam Couter | Internet Engineer | http://www.topic.com.au
like and then run debfoster
with no arguments to get the same result.
Isn't that the kind of thing you're after?
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Sam Couter | Internet Engineer | http://www.topic.com.au/
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task doesn't mean
it's got creeping featuritis. If it tried to do more than just package
management, that would be a different story.
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Sam Couter | Internet Engineer | http://www.topic.com.au/
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Hamish Moffatt [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
If we're expected to avoid any advanced features, why do the authors bother
to implement them?
http://www.tuxedo.org/~esr/jargon/html/entry/creeping-featuritis.html
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Sam Couter | Internet Engineer | http://www.topic.com.au/
[EMAIL
UNIX or UNIX-like system to
explain it to you sometime.
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Sam Couter | Internet Engineer | http://www.topic.com.au/
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format that you
might ever want to rsync, to make it rsync friendly?
Surely it makes more sense to make rsync able to more efficiently deal with
different formats easily.
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Sam Couter | Internet Engineer | http://www.topic.com.au/
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.
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Sam Couter | Internet Engineer | http://www.topic.com.au/
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, anyway). That's about all, and
isn't that enough for everything you'd every want to do with tar?
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Sam Couter | Internet Engineer | http://www.topic.com.au/
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, it does. I just don't want to hear complaints
about a non-standard option suddenly behaving differently.
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Sam Couter | Internet Engineer | http://www.topic.com.au/
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-dc foo.tar.bz2 | tar xf -
Not only will you then become more immune to changes in behaviour that was
non-standard to begin with, you'll also find adjustment to other systems a
lot easier.
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Sam Couter | Internet Engineer | http://www.topic.com.au/
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. ;)
Bad joke? So sue me.
Yes, very bad. I couldn't resist correcting, which makes me at least as bad.
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Sam Couter | Internet Engineer | http://www.topic.com.au/
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would be better. :)
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Sam Couter | Internet Engineer | http://www.topic.com.au/
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