On Mon, 09 Sep 2013, Christian escribió: > > > > I use the "official tgz file" to upload the changes to Debian. This file is > > a "make dist" of the current source. John uploads it. I download this file, > > apply the changes and then upload the new package to Debian (unstable) and > > send the changes to the git. I don't send many changes in debian git's > > folder to avoid disturb Carlos. > > > > kix. > > thanks for your explanations. one question left. When you build the pkg, > then you build it in a chroot env or in the same env you are working ?
In a chroot environment and in a clear environment for building. See pbuilder. > > > >> Do you know openSuSE buildservice ? > > > > Nooop. I use Debian, is the best ;-) > > Hehe, you misunderstood me. 'openSUSE buildservice' is a service to > build binary packages from sources. > https://build.opensuse.org/ > > not only for openSUSE, > not only for RPM packages, but also debian/ubuntu packages. > I think we could bundle our effort in providing binary packages. > > perhaps you should have a look at it. Even if you think debian is best ;) :-) Yes, I saw that page some time ago, somebody talk me about it. I run wmaker Debian packages in some machines, and wmaker upstream in others (for devel wmaker upstream). The main difference is the paths (/usr vs. /usr/local) and then the configuration folders (/usr/local/etc... vs. /etc/GNUstep). We should work in this direction, because if upstream = distro, problem solved :-) Cheers, kix > Cheers > -- > > Christian > ---------------------------------------------------- > - Please do not 'CC' me on list mails. > Just reply to the list :) > ---------------------------------------------------- > Der ultimative shop für Sportbekleidung und Zubehör > > http://www.sc24.de > ---------------------------------------------------- > > > -- > To unsubscribe, send mail to [email protected]. -- To unsubscribe, send mail to [email protected].
