On Mon, 5 May 2025 at 14:53, lejeczek via Discuss discuss@lists.centos.org wrote:
Would this be a bug?
Packages not in the shipped repositories are usually "buildroot" only. They are only built inside of koji so that they can be used as building dependencies for other packages.
These sorts of "buildroot" only are not new and have been EL8 and EL9. They also happened in h EL4, EL5 and I think EL6. EL7 was the only release I know of where it initially shipped with zero or few buildroot only packages.
If the package has been built, then it should show up in koji.
thanks, L. _______________________________________________ Discuss mailing list -- discuss@lists.centos.org To unsubscribe send an email to discuss-leave@lists.centos.org
On Tue, May 6, 2025 at 4:24 AM Stephen Smoogen via Discuss < discuss@lists.centos.org> wrote:
On Mon, 5 May 2025 at 14:53, lejeczek via Discuss < discuss@lists.centos.org> wrote:
Would this be a bug?
Packages not in the shipped repositories are usually "buildroot" only. They are only built inside of koji so that they can be used as building dependencies for other packages.
These sorts of "buildroot" only are not new and have been EL8 and EL9. They also happened in h EL4, EL5 and I think EL6. EL7 was the only release I know of where it initially shipped with zero or few buildroot only packages.
If the package has been built, then it should show up in koji.
Well, there is also the fact that there is no source code for dogtag in CentOS Stream, thus I/we have no idea what he means by the original question in the subject. But, as you elaborated, having the source code in CentOS Stream, does not mean you get a binary package in RHEL/CS.
Troy
-> $ dnf search dogtag-pki --enablerepo appstream-source Last metadata expiration check: 1:25:30 ago on Sat 10 May 2025 12:41:14 CEST. ========================================= Name Exactly Matched: dogtag-pki ========================================= dogtag-pki.src : IdM PKI Package
but never mind my/this thread/question - as per other guy(s) reply, I think I get it now. It was just that naming convention quickly confused me, before I searched further.