[CentOS] spec file frustration (rant)
Johnny Hughes
johnny at centos.org
Wed Dec 14 12:58:02 UTC 2016
On 12/13/2016 04:16 PM, Alice Wonder wrote:
> I'm getting spec files from centos git which is really convenient when
> the related source is easy to find. But some things - e.g. from a spec file
>
> # How to create the source tarball:
> #
> # git clone git://git.fedorahosted.org/git/python-rhsm.git/
> # cd client/python-rhsm
> # tito build --tag python-rhsm-$VERSION-$RELEASE --tgz
>
> Never used tito before, so I install it and try, and rather than giving
> me the source package I need - it gives me a python traceback
> complaining that I haven't configured some things properly.
>
> Seems a lot of the software distribution world is getting overly complex
> with an expectation that the end user who needs to exercise his FLOSS
> rights has to use git or nodejs or for php composer or whatever just to
> get what use to be available with no more complexity than choosing
> tar.gz or tar.bz2 or .zip if the dev was Windows.
>
> Whatever happened to KISS and why can't source tarballs be distributed
> as source tarballs?
>
> Back when I was a Fedora packager - the packaging guidelines would
> reject a package of the Source tarball wasn't a URL and if the timestamp
> on the tarball in the src.rpm didn't match upstream even if the checksum
> was identical.
>
> Guess those days are gone.
>
> /rant
I am not sure what you are trying to accomplish .. but the tools to get
an SRPM or the Sources from CentOS are dead simple.
They are located here:
https://git.centos.org/summary/centos-git-common.git
And they are very easy .. and most are bash scripts.
So:
git clone https://git.centos.org/summary/rpms!skopeo
(that just happens to be what I am working on right now)
cd skopeo
git branch -a (so you can see the branches .. optional)
git checkout c7-extras
get_sources.sh
=================
Now you have the full SRPM in the same directory structure as if you had
installed the SRPM.
If you would have used 'into_srpm.sh' instead of 'get_sources.sh' .. you
would have the SRPM generated as well as the full tree. There are
switches for the tools (-c for get_sources.sh to check the crc info for
already downloaded files .. -d for into_srpm.sh for changing the dist
tag of a generated SRPM, etc.)
I use these tools for every package built for CentOS and they are very
easy to use.
Now, obviously that does not include development inside an extracted
SRPM. But I normally just use diff (or git) to track changes and
generate patches, etc.
Thanks,
Johnny Hughes
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: signature.asc
Type: application/pgp-signature
Size: 198 bytes
Desc: OpenPGP digital signature
URL: <http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/attachments/20161214/6c7a7c47/attachment.sig>
More information about the CentOS
mailing list