On 03/15/2015 08:35 AM, Sandro Mani wrote:
Hi,

Just wondering, is there a particular reason why non-commiters are not
allowed to create buildroot overrides for a package?

Reason for asking: I've got a package (openambit) which installs a file to

Konsole output
%{_libdir}/wireshark/plugins/%{wireshark_ver}/ambit.so

This means, for every version change of wireshark, I need to adjust
%{wireshark_ver} and rebuild.

At present, stable and branched releases, to avoid broken dependencies
in the time window wireshark and then openambit are pushed to stable,
I'd need to nag the wireshark maintainer every time to create a
buildroot override, or ask for commit access to wireshark. I suppose I
should do the latter, but yeah, just wondering if there is a reason
against allowing people to create buildroot overrides directly.

With a similar rationale you could argue that one should be able to commit changes to packages without any special commit rights.

The reason why buildroot overrides can't be made by anyone is that the maintainer might not want people to build packages against the new version, if for example it breaks things.

Here the situation is obviously somewhat different. If updating wireshark breaks openambit, then
 a) wireshark shouldn't have version updates in stable releases per the
    Fedora Updates Policy
 b) if the updates are warranted, wireshark and openambit should be
    updated in unison by the wireshark maintainer
--
Susi Lehtola
Fedora Project Contributor
jussileht...@fedoraproject.org
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