Hello again
After a bit of digging, I got to this:
Ubuntu switched the default compression of Debian packages to zstd
(observed in 22.04). This will now result in files containing
control.tar.zst and data.tar.zst.
Artifactory does not seem to handle this packages, they do not show up
inside the Debian repo and no Debian metadata is displayed when I view the
package.
As a workaround I forced the package to another compression method by
adding the following lines to debian/rules:
override_dh_builddeb:
dh_builddeb -- -Zgzip
Can you tell me if this helps and if you can do anything about it please?
Thanks a lot
Paul
On Mon, 17 Apr 2023 at 12:25, Paul Milner <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hello there
>
> I am trying to install this version of couchdb on Ubuntu 22.0 following
> the instructions in the documentation, but unfortunately it fails. It says
> no sources for couchdb exist. I have done the pre-step and run apt update
> and apt upgrade. It is a totally clean server. When I try to download and
> run the deb, it complains that libicu67 or greater doesn't exist. I'm on
> amd.
>
> I've seen other people having the same issue, but no fixes work.
>
> Thanks for your help
> Best regards
> Paul
>
> On Sat, 7 Jan 2023 at 13:00, Rick Jarvis <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> I would love to… Erlang & Java are outside my comfort zones sadly. If it
>> were JS, I’d be all over it :) If I can help with testing / anything else
>> though, I’d be happy to...
>>
>> > On 5 Jan 2023, at 09:38, Jan Lehnardt <[email protected]> wrote:
>> >
>> > Wip here: https://github.com/apache/couchdb/pull/4291
>> >
>> > But no timelines, as per usual :) — The initial focus will be on
>> feature parity with the existing search, while allowing for more powerful
>> features later on. How many of these advanced features will be available
>> when will depend on folks contributing to this.
>> >
>> > If you wanna help, do give that branch a spin and report back on the PR.
>> >
>> > Best
>> > Jan
>> > —
>> >
>> >> On 3. Jan 2023, at 13:31, Rick Jarvis <[email protected]> wrote:
>> >>
>> >> Thanks Jan
>> >>
>> >> Did I read somewhere that there is a new more powerful search coming
>> to either this version or perhaps 3.4.0? Any info on this / timescales if
>> so?
>> >>
>> >> R
>> >>
>> >>> On 3 Jan 2023, at 10:42, Jan Lehnardt <[email protected]> wrote:
>> >>>
>> >>> Dear community,
>> >>>
>> >>> Apache CouchDB® 3.3.0 has been released and is available for
>> download. It is a feature release, and was originally published on
>> 2023-01-03.
>> >>>
>> >>> Release Notes highlights:
>> >>> • Improve replication performance by at least 3x for certain
>> workloads by…
>> >>> • …speeding up the _bulk_get & _revs_diff endpoints
>> >>> • …making use of the faster _bulk_get endpoint in the replicator
>> >>> • …statistically skip calling the _revs_diff endpoint if it is
>> not needed
>> >>> • this speeds up replications into empty databases
>> significantly
>> >>> • …more efficiently encoding all occurrences of _rev values
>> >>> • A new winning_revs_only replicator option to create a database
>> copy without any conflicts occurring in the source database
>> >>> • Start using SHA256 for session cookie HMAC calculation
>> >>> • Support Erlang 25 with its improved JIT support for ARM64
>> >>> • For a more in-depth discussion see this recording of the November
>> Berlin CouchDB User Group online meetup:
>> https://vi.to/hubs/couchdb-berlin/pages/state-of-the-couch-november-2022-jan-lehnardt-nov-16-2022?v=%2Fvideos%2F5904
>> (free signup required, no spam)
>> >>> • CouchDB is on Mastodon now: https://fosstodon.org/@couchdb
>> >>>
>> >>> See the official release notes document for an exhaustive list of all
>> changes:
>> >>> http://docs.couchdb.org/en/stable/whatsnew/3.3.html
>> >>>
>> >>> Pre-built packages for Windows, macOS, Debian/Ubuntu and RHEL/CentOS
>> are available alongside the source code distribution:
>> https://couchdb.apache.org/#download
>> >>>
>> >>> Apache CouchDB® lets you access your data where you need it. The
>> Couch Replication Protocol is implemented in a variety of projects and
>> products that span every imaginable computing environment from globally
>> distributed server-clusters, over mobile phones to web browsers.
>> >>>
>> >>> Store your data safely, on your own servers, or with any leading
>> cloud provider. Your web- and native applications love CouchDB, because it
>> speaks JSON natively and supports binary data for all your data storage
>> needs.
>> >>>
>> >>> The Couch Replication Protocol lets your data flow seamlessly between
>> server clusters to mobile phones and web browsers, enabling a compelling
>> offline-first user-experience while maintaining high performance and strong
>> reliability. CouchDB comes with a developer-friendly query language, and
>> optionally MapReduce for simple, efficient, and comprehensive data
>> retrieval.
>> >>>
>> >>> The community would like to thank all contributors for their part in
>> making this release, from the smallest bug report or patch to major
>> contributions in code, design, or marketing, we couldn’t have done it
>> without you!
>> >>>
>> >>> On behalf of the CouchDB PMC,
>> >>> Jan Lehnardt
>> >>> —
>> >>
>>
>>