On Wed, 13 Aug 2014 01:25:04 +0200
Stephen John Smoogen <smooge(a)gmail.com> wrote:
On 12 August 2014 21:56, Dennis Gilmore <dennis(a)ausil.us>
wrote:
> On Tue, 12 Aug 2014 21:05:07 +0200
> Stephen John Smoogen <smooge(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
> > Where are we now:
> > We support 3 arches.
> I think you mean 3 releases. we have 3 arches for epel5 and epel6
> and 2 for epel7
>
>
I actually meant arches as I forgot that i386 isn't a 7 item.
> > RHEL4: 1258 srpms. EOL
> > RHEL5: 3651 srpms
> > RHEL6: 5449 srpms
> > RHEL7: 3100 srpms and growing fastest
> >
> > * Maybe as the way to implement EPIC rather than EPEL.
> > * Policy change that allows for regular major changes in EPEL.
> > * Can't update at any times.
> > * Can make incompatible changes on the next point release of
> > RHEL->CentOS.
> > * Example: When RHEL7.1 comes out we have a 30 day window to get
> > packages updated and new packages in that make incompatible
> > changes.
What is the problem you're trying to solve here?
> > * Archive 7.0. The toplevel 7 tree is a symlink to
whatever
> > point release is latest.
> > * Formalize the governance of EPEL.
> > * Written policies of some sort for decision making
> > * Elections?
> > * Problems to solve:
> > * Don't want to just listen to the people who are loudest
> > * Don't want to just listen to the people who have been
> > around the longest
> > * Do we want automated testing of EPEL? yes. get it working on
> > whatever subset you can and we'll go on from there.
> > * Move to CentOS as build system? Gives us additional arches.
It doesn't actually give us any extra arches. I would like to work out
a way to enable EPEL contribution via a CentOS path and have EPEL be
part of both Fedora and CentOS.
> > * Could we do an ISV program like quaid does?
>
> something to consider is moving epel to /opt/fedora/epel or
> somewhere like it, then dealing with overlap etc should be simpler,
> but it would take a massive change in packaging and could really
> only be done in epel8
>
I think that would be something with
softwarecollections.org as that
seems in line with their way of packaging items. I think that for
some sorts of packages and libraries it makes sense for that, but I
don't know if EPEL would mix and match like that. What I would like
to do is the following:
I disagree. FHS says that anything not part of the OS should go
in /opt/ EPEL is an add on and not part of the OS.
We move from our moving distribution to a point release cycle with a
disk layout like the following:
epel
epel/development/
epel/development/5
epel/development/6
epel/development/7
epel/beta/5.12
epel/beta/6.7
epel/beta/7.1
epel/releases
epel/releases/6.6
epel/releases/5.11
epel/releases/7.0
epel/updates
epel/updates/6.6
epel/updates/5.11
epel/updates/7.0
epel/updates/testing/
epel/updates/testing/6.6
epel/updates/testing/5.11
epel/updates/testing/7.0
epel/development would be like the current EPEL directories but
without the stringent requirements that packages are locked to a
specific version for the lifetime of the overall RHEL release.
Instead whenever RHEL releases a new dot release (7.0, 6.6, 5.11),
EPEL would branch off the releases from development to beta/7.0 or
beta/6.6 etc. Packages would be built against the point release and
would need to be tested to get sufficient karma for 'release'. Once 6
weeks have passed from the RHEL point release, all packages which had
gotten enough karma and that had completed repository trees would be
put into epel/releases/6.6. Updates to that package would be put into
updates/testing/6.6 and then promoted to updates/6.6 when enough
karma had been given for an update. New packages which were added
after the point release would show up in updates following the
process Fedora does for new packages between point releases.
This will make a much larger work load for releng. what extra resources
will we have? I find it quite confusing. I honestly do not like the
idea of having a static snapshot for releases. we have a few options
available to make older versions available. we can mash the tree with
every package ever released. or we can work on fixing the patches in
mash to have say the last 2 or 3 builds. I think we are better off
having epel as somthing stable where you can not put incompatible
changes for the life of the rhel release and epel-extras where things
are able to change quickly and in incompatible ways.
Later when 7.1, 6.7, 5.12 (or whatever they are called) comes out
then the process is repeated which will make sure that packages that
aren't needed enough to have sponsors will not be in EPEL and
potentially broken and large updates are possible so if python34 is
in 7.0 but python35 is ready for 7.2 it can replace it without
problems (or similarly with ruby23 etc etc). Once the next point
release is made ready, the old point release will be archived off to
keep storage levels within reason.
I know that this proposal needs a lot more fleshing out, but I think
it covers the use cases many users of EPEL need for long term usage of
packages.
Dennis