Petr "Qaxi" Klíma wrote: > Les Mikesell napsal(a): >>> >>> Correct, you would think Fedora took care of this, right ? But there >>> is no interest for Fedora to take care of that because they want to >>> be the only repository. It is not something they have an incentive >>> for to fix. >>> >>> That is exactly the problem. The repotag would be a workaround (and a >>> convenient one for users) but the real changes need to be in yum or >>> somewhere else. And Fedora does not care, so RHEL will not have it. >>> >>> I have warned for this on the Feodra mailinglist years ago. There >>> just is no interest to have the diversity of more than one repository. >> >> What value does diversity add when the end user can't select which one >> he wants or load all of them? I understand the scenario where a >> single repository has a policy that prohibits certain packages from >> being included, but the only conflicts in those cases should be where >> an incomplete version is packaged in one place under the same name as >> the full version in a place with a different policy. The more common >> case would just be additional packages or packages with different names. >> >> From an end-user viewpoint, I can't see why anyone would want to >> maintain a potentially-conflicting package of something that can be >> freely distributed and keep it in an isolated repository, especially >> without any mechanism to control which will be installed. Can you >> explain the reason anyone would want to have diversity instead of a >> single maintainer per package and the same packages in all >> repositories whose policies find them acceptable? >> > Diversity adds a lot of value. If EPEL will be only repo nobody on RHEL > workstation can see/listen MP3, WMA, DVD playing, because of interesting > US software patent and millenium act law. That's not what I meant. Obviously we need additional packages in other repositories and that will be true as long as there is any policy that might exclude any contribution to a centrally managed repository. The question is, why do we need/want different versions of the same-named packages, or packages that provide different versions of the same files that can overwrite each other based on conditions we can't control? There probably is a good reason to want this - I just can't think of it right now. -- Les Mikesell lesmikesell at gmail.com