----- Original Message -----
From: "Radek Holy" <rholy(a)redhat.com>
To: devel(a)lists.fedoraproject.org
Sent: Tuesday, December 9, 2014 6:28:54 PM
Subject: Poll: How users use DNF
Dear users of YUM and DNF,
I'm writing to you regarding a request for your feedback. I would be very
grateful if you could send me a brief description of how you use YUM or DNF
currently or how would you like to use it. I am particularly interested in
the occurrences of "dnf/yum install" calls in your scripts. What does these
scripts do and what do they expect when they call the "install" command in
different situations?
Please share with me the use cases, not the description of the "install"
command. Think twice before you share something because I believe it's not
as easy as it might seem. As an example I think it might be something like:
- "I call YUM install, because I want to get given packages into my system
and I don't care whether it requires an upgrade or downgrade or what." or
- "I want to get them there but it should protect me against dangerous
operations like downgrades" or
- "I often make typos, so I expect that the program knows what I mean" or
- "it would be nice if it would literally perform the installation; if any of
the packages cannot be installed because of any reason, it should fail".
Not something like: "that's obvious that the install command should never
downgrade packages".
Please focus on *use cases*. The *real* (non-hypothetical) use cases. Not on
the command's name as it might also result in a new command (while
preserving the well-known install command together with an appropriate
behaviour).
I don't mind if you send it offlist (or to another list). I think there is no
need to comment on anyone's use case. Every case is valid. Just not every
case can be supported.
Wow, I have already received a lot of feedback from you. I have not read it all yet. I
very much appreciate it. Feel free to add even more feedback :-)
I just forgot to mention that even your own aliases, plugins, workarounds and the other
hacks you always need to do your job properly would be very interesting for us.
Thank you in advance
--
Radek HolĂ˝
Associate Software Engineer
Software Management Team
Red Hat Czech