El sáb, 23-06-2012 a las 17:53 +0100, Ciaran McCreesh escribió: > On Sat, 23 Jun 2012 18:47:26 +0200 > Justin <j...@gentoo.org> wrote: > > On 23.06.2012 18:17, Ciaran McCreesh wrote: > > > On Sat, 23 Jun 2012 18:13:23 +0200 > > > Justin <j...@gentoo.org> wrote: > > >> Did you read what you wrote and thought about what you request from > > >> others? Probably you better should. > > > > > > Uh huh, and I think we all know there's a huge difference between > > > knowing what versions and slots are and knowing what "a multilib" > > > is. > > > > > > > Might be right, but that doesn't allow you to break your own rules. > > Plus I still don't get the problem of using SLOTS in the way they are > > used now. > > "My own rules" are that enough material is presented that the relevant > people understand it. If you look at simple proposals like usex, silent > rules or EBUILD_PHASE_FUNC, you'll see quite clearly that we ask for > very little in the way of text in cases where the change is easily > understood. > > > And I can't find this out by simply googling. In contrast, an > > explanation of multilib in context of linux distribution and more > > specific gentoo can be found easily. > > Oh really? I was under the impression that there wasn't even general > agreement upon whether or not multilib applied to "C" or to "C, and > Python, and things like it". > > > Stop acting in this arrogant way you are doing right now. > > Come on. Submitting a simple proposal with at least as much detail as > was provided for other, equally simple proposals is "arrogant" now?
Did you send this proposal seriously or only to troll comparing it with what you think tommy did with multilib thread? If this is seriously, could you explain more how paludis behave in this case? Looks like it treats SLOT with major number as latest version, that is not always true and I don't understand why it should be always true as there are cases where upstream could release newer 3.0.x releases that are really newer than 3.1.x versions. Current -r300/200 stuff shouldn't break as it's only used to slot libraries and that libs will only be installed when some app RDEPENDs on them. > > > > That's covered in the devmanual and in the user documentation, so > > > there's no need to repeat it here. > > > > Ever heard about references. They are good, if you don't like to > > repeat what is written, but which are necessary context to understand > > what you are writing. You should use them for the sake of > > understanding, if you are to lazy to write it out again. > > Please take a look at the proposal for EBUILD_PHASE_FUNC, and say where > it references what "phase functions" are, or the proposal for usex and > say where it references what "use flags" are, or the proposal for > silent rules where it references what "econf" is. > > > >> To me, it doesn't solve the root cause, but actually I can't judge > > >> this, because I am missing a description of what is really going > > >> wrong. > > > > > > As I've already said, this isn't about solving the root cause. It's > > > about reducing the impact of damage that's already been done until > > > the root cause is solved properly. > > > > My clear vote is No. We shouldn't implement anything which allows bad > > coding anywhere, just for the sake of having it "solved" now. > > The bad coding has already happened. Are you volunteering to revert the > Ruby virtuals? >
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