Il giorno mer, 01/08/2012 alle 18.08 +0100, Graham Percival ha scritto: > Hmm. I can't answer this directly, but I'll pass along my > considerations: > > - if you try to compile GUB on debian unstable (or any other > recent distro), you will likely encounter odd compile failures. > These are important to fix at some point in time (otherwise we'd > be stuck GUB on ubuntu 10.04 only), and require a great deal of > knowledge of compilers and searching for solutions online. > OTOH, it might just work "out of the box" in which case it'll > just take 6-12 hours and then be working.
With my Fedora installation on that Core 2 Duo (x86_64), GUB Python program has screwed up dependencies (it missed a lot of them) in a consistent way across different Fedora versions, and when I reported it I got not clue on debugging the intricated Python code of GUB, so I think my next attempt at building GUB will be a chrooted Debian stable. Now I've freed my main machine from lilypond-patchy-staging, I can more easily build a GUB in background while doing other things, reporting how it progresses and asking for help if needed. > - I think that supporting build numbers will be an easier > introduction to version number handling in GUB and our docs than > jumping straight into 4-tuples. The first step is to make it > work in "make website", which is infinitely easier than trying > to do anything in GUB. This is a relatively easy thing to fix, > so it might make sense to leave it for a relative beginner... > OTOH, the bug has existed for two years, so might as well tackle > it now. I guess that if we want the release number in "make website", we want it in HTML footers and manuals, don't we? > Also, David is quite likely to want to use build > numbers if they are available. > (whereas I'm happy to say "screw users" or "screw version > numbers" and either not bother updating with -2 if there's a > serious problem, or else bump to .x+1 one day after a .x > release; neither of those options are particularly ideal for a > stable branch) IMHO patch level numbers are cheap, as it doesn't often happen to release twice within two or three days. Best, John _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user