On Sat, 2015-07-11 at 00:20 -0700, Andre McCurdy wrote: > GPLv3 was released in June 2007 and most GNU packages transitioned to > it fairly quickly, so by definition, the pre-GPLv3 version of any GNU > package is now very old and unsupported. We do have a precedent for > keeping pre-GPLv3 versions alive though (a good thing for those of us > who need them!). What makes parted different from the other pre-GPLv3 > packages which are already in oe-core? > > Looking at the parted changelog, there have certainly been a lot of > bug fixes since 1.8.7 (the last GPLv2 version) but it's difficult to > tell how many are for functionality which would be relevant to a > typical embedded system. > > http://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/parted.git/tree/NEWS > > RHEL 5 seems to have been maintaining it's version of parted 1.8.1 up > until Jan 2013. RHEL's 33 patches might be a good source of fixes for > parted 1.8.7. > > http://vault.centos.org/5.11/os/SRPMS/parted-1.8.1-30.el5.src.rpm > > As someone has volunteered to maintain the pre-GPLv3 parted recipe > (and I'll volunteer as a secondary maintainer, if that helps) > hopefully there would not be a "serious maintenance burden" on anyone > who doesn't have an interest in the older version.
This does touch on something I have wondered about for a while, which is whether the time has come to move the GPLv2 pieces to their own layer and possibly their own maintainership. Obviously there are pros and cons to doing that. Thoughts? Cheers, Richard -- _______________________________________________ Openembedded-core mailing list Openembedded-core@lists.openembedded.org http://lists.openembedded.org/mailman/listinfo/openembedded-core