On 03/01/2018 11:52 AM, Kevin Kofler wrote:
> Vít Ondruch wrote:
>> Speaking of that, it seems that the Rawhide compose failed yesterday due
>> to some KDE/QT soname bump:
> [actually a typo in a Requires, as was already pointed out]
>>
>> https://kojipkgs.fedoraproject.org/compose/rawhide/Fedora-Rawhide-20180228.n.0/logs/global/pungi.global.log
>> https://kojipkgs.fedoraproject.org/compose/rawhide/Fedora-Rawhide-20180228.n.0/logs/i386-x86_64/livemedia-Spins-KDE.i386-x86_64.log
>> https://kojipkgs.fedoraproject.org//work/tasks/8910/25368910/root.log
> 
> Well, the real issue is that the entire Rawhide compose fails just because 
> one release-blocking deliverable failed to compose. In this case, it was the 
> KDE Spin, but it has been happening with any other release-blocking 
> deliverable, e.g., Atomic ostree composes.

FYI: atomic ostree composes are not release blocking so that is not why a 
compose
will fail.

> 
> Why can we not just deliver the parts that succeeded and keep the last 
> working version of the deliverables that failed to compose this time? In 
> other words, why can we not just upload the 20180228 compose and keep the 
> 20180227 or whatever KDE ISO that last built? Why does it have to be all or 
> nothing?
> 
>         Kevin Kofler
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