W dniu 14.11.2011 18:16, Michael Scherer pisze:
Le dimanche 13 novembre 2011 à 22:32 +0100, Kamil Rytarowski a écrit :
On 13.11.2011 10:58, Michael Scherer wrote:
Le samedi 12 novembre 2011 à 21:11 +0100, Kamil Rytarowski a écrit :
On 12.11.2011 20:20, Michael Scherer wrote:
Le samedi 12 novembre 2011 à 16:44 +0100, Kamil Rytarowski a écrit :

There is also one important patch missed in Mageia -
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2011-11/msg00787.html it's
dependency for the GNS3 simulator. OpenSUSE already includes it
https://build.opensuse.org/package/files?package=qemu&project=openSUSE%3ATools

If nobody is against I will do it and contact the maintainer (misc).
I prefer to wait on the stable release ( ie, no rc1 ).
We will wait on stable version of qemu.
OK
And no patch unless it comes from upstream ( and even, I am not keen on
backporting feature, better wait for stable release ).

GNS3 is already in stable! This package is broken - no dynamips (=no
router emulation at all...), no patched qemu (no virtualization support
at all...) According to the developers and their online documentation
for package maintainers http://forum.gns3.net/post11571.html UDP patched
Qemu is dependency/very important.
The fact that someone pushed a broken package is not a good reason to
add patches to qemu.
OK, but I don't understand this.

Why to keep defunct packages (this could be at least "major+ issue"  on
our bugzilla) in stable and don't even want to fix, ignore this academic
software (with maybe overall 1 000 000* downloads and 100 000 regular
users), and to support... the inadvisable opinion of Mageia around.. at
least the GNS3 users.
Let me rephrase again. Everybody sooner or later think "that soft is
great, but why do not add just a small patch there". That's just one
patch, where is the problem ?

The problem appear just after a few months, when the patch is still not
upstream, and that someone who do not know C, python whatever has to
take the software and maintain it. Or when someone who know how to
program lose time rediffing the patch instead of doing something more
useful. We face bugs that cannot be reproduced upstream, security
problem that could be added in non reviewed patch by devs. Fragmentation
in linux distributions are also caused by differents features, due to
patchs.

All of this need to be avoided, and I think we have enough problems with
stuff that people do not want to take care of it to not add more burden,
be it under the form of a small patch. All big collections start by one
little stuff.


* 799 968 Windows Downloads (just from the sourceforge mirrors) of the
latest Windows binary of GNS3 (source
http://sourceforge.net/projects/gns-3/files/GNS3/0.7.4/)

We have too many patches on a general scale, and I
do not want to end with a 2nd package like gdb.

Patches make harder to upgrade, harder to make sure security is done
correctly, and harder to ensure stuff are working ( since we are on our
own when we patch something ).
So for the patches, make sure it is upstream
It's not qemu upstream, it's GNS3 and its community upstream.
If you want to have a feature in qemu, the road is "push it upstream".
Once accepted upstream, it will sooner or later be in our packages.

   ( and given the discussion
on ml, it should be soon )
When I ask the developers, they don't know if qemu will include the
patch at all and when (now or after one year) and they suggested to do
the openSUSE way (today the most recommended and full featured Linux
distro for GNS3).
Maybe we are not talking of the same patch, but I am talking of this
one :
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2011-11/msg00629.html

AFAIK, the patch have been accepted, just not committed yet. The last
mail were from 1 week ago. The only issue is that they are in freeze for
now, and the git web interface is down, and I do see the commit in my
checkout about it so far.

and then in a tarball ( again, given that's a
rc 1, that should be ok soon ).

We must fix the package and provide at least not so heavy broken ones...

I've prepared new version of GNS3, included into svn dynamips and
xdotool (this one suggested) - these I can maintain with my mentor, so I
ask for patch qemu in stable versus UDP support.
Updates are not supposed to get new features,
Well this is a special case - the bugfix provides the feature, or the
feature provides the bugfix.
People will always tell "it is a special case". We can always say that
any feature is a bugfix, provided we say that the bug is "I cannot do
that".


Hi!
We have succeed to push the patch upstream http://git.qemu.org/?p=qemu.git;a=commitdiff;h=0e0e7facc775e9bb020314f48751b3d09f316c8b It took 2 months.. It will be shipped with the next version of Qemu so no need to take care of the patch for next releases. Can I now patch the old Qemu in Mga1 to ship UDP support and therefore be usable within GNS3? I will then fix GNS3 and its requirements too.

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