Hello Gunnar, It sounds great! What would you think about documenting that process somewhere, so we have a reference for people who are not used to build packages from source and/or use git? I believe it'd be quite useful for them.
Sent from my HTC ----- Reply message ----- From: "Gunnar Wolf" <[email protected]> To: "Alvaro Lopez Ortega" <[email protected]> Cc: "Leonel Nunez" <[email protected]>, "Cherokee" <[email protected]>, "Daniel Lo Nigro" <[email protected]> Subject: [Cherokee] Cherokee 1.2.100 released Date: Tue, Oct 11, 2011 7:13 pm Alvaro Lopez Ortega dijo [Mon, Oct 10, 2011 at 11:46:01AM +0200]: > Gunnar, Leonel, > > How would you feel about providing a short cookbook on how to build Cherokee > .debs? > > - Unpack a release tarball > - Clone the '/debian' directory from git > - Compile the whole thing with dpkg > > I guess it'd be useful for people who use Debian/Ubuntu derivatives and/or > must stick to a old/stable version. People who use Debian/Ubuntu should use the provided packages. People who use derivatives which are not binary-compatible and want to provide a Cherokee package should base their work on our git tree, and most preferrably, include their work (including tagging the specific versions) in it. If we are not fast enough to push new upstream releases, then please join in and help us! Push the new Cherokee versions to the Git tree. I'm not only using the Git tree for Debian work - I'd love to make it useful for as many derivative distributions as possible. And one of the points that makes Debian the most derived-from distribution is that it's actually very easy to integrate your whole distribution work in it.
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