Shrinking/splitting up core Was: Why are there only i686 and i586 Version of glibc...

Willem Riede wrrhdev at riede.org
Tue Jun 8 22:18:54 UTC 2004


On 2004.06.07 22:18, Tom Diehl wrote:
> On Mon, 7 Jun 2004, Willem Riede wrote:
> > On 2004.06.07 10:24, Stephen Smoogen wrote:
> > > On Sun, 2004-06-06 at 22:33, Steven Pritchard wrote:
> > > > On Sun, Jun 06, 2004 at 03:23:41PM -0400, Willem Riede wrote:
> > > > > How would that work with respect to upgrades? Haven't we had cases where glibc
> > > > > needed to be upgraded and that change affected virtually all applications?
> > > > > With a monolithic distribution that is pretty painless, compatible versions
> > > > > are available and replace their ancestors.
> > > > 
> > > > This really comes back to a question that came up a week or so ago...
> > > > How should anaconda handle third-party installation CDs?  (If the
> > > > method is good enough for Fedora Extras, it should be good enough for
> > > > any third-party repository.)
> > > > 
> > > 
> > > I dont think Anaconda is meant to look at anything beyond the bare
> > > installation Cd's the rest should be done with first-boot. Maybe first
> > > boot should have a yum configuration section where you can enter the yum
> > > places you want to to point ot.
> > 
> > But at that point you have a broken system - not acceptable IMHO.
> 
> Why do you think it is broken? That makes no sense.

Because I am talking about the case where e.g. glibc changes in a way that needs
changes in applications to make them work again. Since with a mini-core most of
the applications will not be in core, but in extra's, they wouldn't be upgraded
when you do the core upgrade, and therefore not work afterwards. QED.

Regards, Willem Riede.





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