Thanks, Laca. You have seconds. I'll contact you offline to get you set up.
Eric On Thu, 22 Feb 2007, Laszlo (Laca) Peter wrote:
Hi all, So the /usr/gnu proposal[1] was approved by PSARC. Obviously, the reason for defining /usr/gnu wasn't theoretical -- it allows moving GNU packages from /usr/sfw to /usr or /usr/gnu and it helps us integrating more GNU packages into Solaris. We have already seen the first few putbacks (m4, bison). The JDS team (well, Dermot ;) is working on adding more packages (mostly the tools required for building JDS). Obviously, it's easier for us to deliver these through the JDS consolidation. However, they really don't belong there. Neither do some of the packages we already deliver into Solaris, like Python, libpng, libogg, etc. I think the GNU Solaris community would be a perfect place for these, if it wasn't a community but a project (or a consolidation?). I propose that we launch a project that aims for creating a repository of spec files that follow the /usr/gnu rules. Sun could pick the packages that we want to integrate into Solaris and support, other packages could be available from opensolaris.org with community support only. How does this relate to: SFW: If proven successful, it would gradually phase out SFW. The idea is that this repository would be more inclusive (i.e. not only supported Solaris packages) and easier to contribute to than SFW. CCD: Again, if proven successful, supersedes it. One big difference is that the CCD installs to /opt, while this repository would install to /usr. JDS: Co-exist. Non-desktop related tools and libs could be moved to this new repository. SFE: We have 200+ spec files written by various Sun and non-Sun opensolaris community members here: http://pkgbuild.svn.sf.net/viewvc/pkgbuild/spec-files-extra/trunk/ Those that satisfy the /usr/gnu criterion of being listed in the FSF/UNESCO free software directory can be moved into the new repository (after some clean-up and testing). Blastwave: This project would not support older releases of Solaris, not even S10. It would install to /usr and would not duplicate anything that is already in Solaris (especially since some of those parts of Solaris would be build from this repo). Thanks, Laca [1] http://mail.opensolaris.org/pipermail/opensolaris-arc/2007-January/000884.html
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