On Dec 3, 2007 10:35 AM, Gustavo J. A. M. Carneiro <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Jaap, I am well aware of this, but I am not committing a WAF script to > each project repository is the best way to go. Each script is 100KB > semi-binary file. Every time I update WAF I would need to essentially > add 100KB to the repository.
Is it only me or does "Every time" sounds like something that happens often? As I see it you setup your build-environment with some revision of waf and configure it so it does everything you need. When it does that there's very little point in upgrading unless it improves performance, or the requirements of the build process changes to something the current waf version cannot handle, otherwise the same version should work "forever". So if "every time" really means once every second year, it wouldn't be that much, would it? There's absolutly no reason to upgrade waf unless the features benefit the project directly by plugging bugs exposed by the projects configuration. -- Daniel Svensson, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> _______________________________________________ desktop-devel-list mailing list desktop-devel-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/desktop-devel-list