> > So it appears this thread was probably not enough. Which
keeps us with
> > interesting state where mock by default does not install weak
> > dependencies where Koji installs them. It causes interesting issues already.
>
> mock/koji not installing weak dependencies == anything wanting ruby
> being broken.
>
> Reason: "ruby" suggests "rubypick" which suggests
"ruby".
>
> Packages buildrequire "ruby" but do not get "rubypick" installed
(or if
> they are lucky they get) so are unable to find Ruby because there is no
> "/bin/ruby" executable.
If ruby needs ruby-pick to work, then ruby-pick must not be a weak
dependency of ruby, but a hard one.
The koji buildroot really should only install hard dependencies. The
buildroot is supposed to be the minimal possible set needed to build
the package. If a package that would be installed as a weak dependency
of one of the build dependencies is needed to build the package, that
packa is a build dependency too.
That's incorrect. EG a package has optional Ruby bindings, it doesn't
need ruby to build but if ruby isn't present the ruby binding sub
package is empty. The buildroot should have all that is needed to
build the desired functionality, nothing more nothing less.
Peter