On Mon, Oct 31, 2005 at 11:15:35PM -0800, Russ Allbery wrote: > Speaking as a co-maintainer of libkrb5-dev, no, this Conflicts assumes > that the two packages, er, conflict. Namely, they provide > identically-named include files which define different ways of > implementing roughly the same API. I'd love to have heimdal-dev and > libkrb5-dev peacefully coexist since I personally use both, but since they > both implement the same API, this is rather difficult to do.
Having the same API is not a problem as long as I can select (using appropriate -I and -L options) which one do I want. > Please note that using pbuilder works around this issue fairly well for > building Debian packages, although I realize that this is far from solving > every application. But that does not work well in a multi-user environment. Requiring every user to have a separate pbuilder environment so they can use their preferred Kerberos implementation requires a lot of extra disk space, I/O bandwidth, memory and CPU power. Also, pbuilder might not be that useful for people working on software that is not Debianized. > I don't consider this to be a good solution. #include <krb5.h> is part of > the API, and forcing all packages that want to build with Kerberos to use > special compiler flags to find include files in non-standard locations > seems to me to defeat the entire point of the FHS. This is nonsense. People using other OSes routinely build software at non-standard locations and they do not have any "API" issues at all. Furthermore, any Kerberos-using application should already use krb5-config to determine the neccessary compiler and linker flags, otherwise the application is already buggy as it will not build correctly on many non-Linux systems where Kerberos is not installed at a system location. Also, I do not see any FHS issues here. Heimdal installing headers under /usr/include/heimdal-krb5 (and .so links under /usr/lib/heimdal-krb5) while MIT Kerberos installing headers under /usr/include/mit-krb5 (and .so links under /usr/lib/mit-krb5) is fully FHS-compliant. > (I didn't think separating the libraries was necessary; don't they use > non-conflicting names already?) Which separation do you think of? Both heimdal-dev and libkrb5-dev contain the /usr/lib/libkrb5.so symlink, so they do conflict unless that link is moved to some other place. > The only solution that seems feasible to me would be using alternatives > for all of the conflicting header files, and that solution doesn't exactly > fill me with glee. No. As I said krb5-config is already part of the Kerberos build interface so you only need alternatives for krb5-config. > I would also question whether running > update-alternatives is really that much easier than simply installing the > other -dev package and letting aptitude do its thing. What do you mean by "letting aptitude do its thing"? aptitude would _remove_ the other -dev package and that is _exactly_ what I have problem with. Gabor -- --------------------------------------------------------- MTA SZTAKI Computer and Automation Research Institute Hungarian Academy of Sciences --------------------------------------------------------- -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]