On Mon, Jan 25, 2010 at 5:04 PM, Ciro Iriarte <[email protected]> wrote: > 2010/1/25 Andrew Beekhof <[email protected]>: >> On Mon, Jan 25, 2010 at 4:15 PM, Ciro Iriarte <[email protected]> wrote: >>> 2010/1/25 Andrew Beekhof <[email protected]>: >>> >>> Also, in the Advanced Build Target Selection you have this options: >>> >>> SUSE:SLE-10/standard >>> SUSE:SLE-10:SDK/standard >>> SUSE:SLE-10:SP2/standard >>> SUSE:SLE-10:SP2:SDK/standard >>> SUSE:SLE-10:SP3/standard >>> SUSE:SLE-10:SP3:SDK/standard >>> SUSE:SLE-11/standard >>> SUSE:SLE-11:SP1/standard >>> SUSE:SLES-9/standard >> >> Ah, that seems to be new. > > Not really :) > >>> Would be really nice to have it available on SLES also, but your time >>> is yours. Thanks a lot for your work and effort in this project. >> >> If there is a public repo that I can get the rpms from, as I can for >> EPEL, then adding SLES is easy. >> There is also the option of an interested third-party dropping the >> tarballs into the build service instead of me :-) > > Hmmm, not sure what you mean.
I mean if someone else wants to jump through the hoops to keep server:/ha-clustering up-to-date, thats great. I just wont be doing it myself :-) > The RPMs are available from > http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/server:/ha-clustering/SLES_10/ > and the SPEC files from > https://build.opensuse.org/project/show?project=server:ha-clustering > creating a free account. In fact I see you as a member of the project, > so probably you knew all this :D > > I can create a subproject in my home and drop the tarball there, but I > would rather like to keep things in the server:/ha-clustering, > spreading packages everywhere would only confuse users. Now that you > mention EPEL, I see updated RHEL packages on the OBS, how do they > compare?, On OBS? Wasn't me, I don't use OBS at all anymore. > it's sad that RHEL packages are being updated but SLES > aren't. Anyone in the world can build against the very latest EPEL repos and be compatible with CentOS and RHEL. The same isn't possible for SLES, you have to use OBS (and hope that it's up and gets to your package some time this century). OBS is a nice idea, its just to under-staffed and under-resourced to be useful. _______________________________________________ Linux-HA mailing list [email protected] http://lists.linux-ha.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-ha See also: http://linux-ha.org/ReportingProblems
