[Norbert Preining] > Ok, so the solution is to go for a `double' way: > - Package debian packages the debian way, ignoring other arch/os > combinations. > - Build some `non-standard' debian packages which have to be provided in > a different way (our web server or something else) which put binaries > into /src/<arch>-<os>/... > These packages would only be necessary for those who want to serve > texlive to other arch/os combinations via nfs/smb?
Sounds good. Except you meant /srv/ not /src/. > Ok, but for those quasi inofficial packages only necessary for those > serving texlive we don't need source packages, just build the > packages in some other way. Well, you can build the package from a "source package" that already has binaries in it - it's not that it can't be done. It's just that the Debian Project, as a rule, doesn't accept packages that can't be built from source, on a Debian system - even if said source code is shipped. By shipping these .debs yourself, rather than pushing them into Debian, you sidestep this. Lots of "source packages" in the non-free section have pre-built binaries in them - so it's technically not hard to do, and is probably easier to use the source package format than some other ad hoc means of producing a .deb file. Peter
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