On 27.02.2009 10:55, Andrea Musuruane wrote:
On Thu, Feb 26, 2009 at 10:51 PM, Kevin Kofler <[email protected]> wrote:
No, the problem is that you need to use RPM 4.6 on the host system to build
Rawhide packages, see the discussions on the fedora-devel-list.
If the problem is that our build system doesn't yet use RPM 4.6, why
don't we update it?

One reason: Because the PPC builder uses F9 and is used for other things as well -- so simply updating it to a RPM version might break other crucial services on that machine. Thus is needs to be properly discussed and planed how to move forward before we can do something. I tried to reach the owner of the PPC machine (who's traveling right now) yesterday to discuss a solution, but didn't get a response yet.

Another reason: Somebody needs to sit down and actually do install the new rpm (a sane one; not one that is found unsigned somewhere on the net!) on the two x86-builders that both run CentOS 5.


But the real reason is a different one:

*Our organization in regards to infrastructure maintenance sucks. A lot.*

We afaics need a real infrastructure team with at least two or three *active* (e.g. not only driven by events like breakage) people that take care of the builders and all the other infra we have. Only then RPM Fusion will last. I had hoped Xavier would form such a team, but that didn't happen afaics and he afaics seems to be quite busy with real life and Fedora-tasks right now, otherwise I guess he would have foreseen this problem and acted already.

CU
knurd

P.S.: Please note that I don't want to get counted as part of the "infrastructure team". Yes, I have access to some (nearly all) of the builders (sometimes I'm the only one that has access), but I really want to hand the responsibility over to a infra team. But there is nobody I can hand it over to afaics. Reminder: I just did infra work in the past because somebody had to do it to get RPM Fusion running.

And another reminder: Our infra is quite fragile afaics. We have lots of single-points of failure and there are lots of hacks here and there to make things work. That could become a real problem in the long run if we don't form a real active infra team.

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