On Sun, 31 Jul 2016, 15:58:21 +0200, Manfred Hollstein wrote: > On Sun, 31 Jul 2016, 14:52:08 +0200, Manfred Hollstein wrote: > > Moin, > > > > On Sun, 31 Jul 2016, 14:39:56 +0200, Manfred Hollstein wrote: > > > [...] but at least the libnfs package is not so easy to explain: > > > > > > # zypper in libnfs8 -libnfs > > > Loading repository data... > > > Reading installed packages... > > > Resolving package dependencies... > > > > > > Problem: kodi-16.1-1.9.x86_64 requires libnfs, but this requirement > > > cannot be provided > > > deleted providers: libnfs-1.10.0-1.7.x86_64 > > > Solution 1: Following actions will be done: > > > deinstallation of kodi-16.1-1.9.x86_64 > > > deinstallation of kodi.binary-addons-pvr.vuplus-16.1-1.22.x86_64 > > > Solution 2: keep libnfs-1.10.0-1.7.x86_64 > > > Solution 3: break kodi-16.1-1.9.x86_64 by ignoring some of its > > > dependencies > > > > > > Choose from above solutions by number or cancel [1/2/3/c] (c): > > > > > > So, kodi (at least) hasn't be rebuilt against current Tumbleweed for > > > quite some time, has it? > > > > hmm, looking at kodi's build results in pmbs shows that there are issues > > caused by switching to gcc6. There is a patch for this available at > > > > <https://github.com/xbmc/xbmc/pull/9703> > > > > Can someone please add this to the package in Multimedia? > > hmm, and package "handbrake" appears to depend on the various libav* and > related packages apparently coming from ffmpeg-3.1 which is no longer > provided by Packman but now reuses old ffmpeg-2.8 from oS:multimedia:libs > Looking at "handbrake"'s build results shows "unresolvable". > > I'm afraid, moving back/using packages like ffmpeg etc. to oS is not > actually working in the current state.
Adding openSUSE:multimedia:libs to my current system also doesn't really look promising: # zypper dup -D --from multimedia:libs.obs Loading repository data... Reading installed packages... Computing distribution upgrade... 219 Problems: ... It looks like it would be really replacing everything from former Packman and those packages actually coming from Tumbleweed itself. Filtering out those package from Tumbleweed to keep instead of m:l looks a bit teadious to me. To be honest, the previous situation where one would install plain Tumbleweed and then adds Packman's repositories for the most relevant packages is much more appealing. I'd really prefer to have a _usable_ basic OS installation with a Packman dropin to provide everything for all those bad codecs looked compared to what we have now, no? This leads me back to my initial question: What is the current recommendation for using Packman on Tumbleweed - now extended by "and not having to add openSUSE:multimedia:libs"? TIA, cheers. l8er manfred
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