On Thu, Apr 2, 2020 at 2:50 PM Steve Grubb <sgrubb(a)redhat.com> wrote:
On Thursday, April 2, 2020 1:55:10 PM EDT Adam Jackson wrote:
> On Thu, 2020-04-02 at 13:24 -0400, Steve Grubb wrote:
>
> > Hello,
> >
> > I've been doing some testing of F32 and was curious about something. I
> > have a kickstart file that just installs @core to be a minimal system.
> > While looking over the resulting system, there are fonts, wayland, gtk3
> > and others. Is this intentional? The system probably doesn't have
> > everything that's needs to function as a desktop. Why are all these
> > installed by @core?
>
>
> Because you're installing with weak dependencies enabled, and one of
> them is bringing in gtk3.
Thanks for the pointer. Investigating that:
$ rpm --query --recommends gtk3
dconf(x86-64)
Looking at that
https://src.fedoraproject.org/rpms/dconf/blob/master/f/dconf.spec
There is a build requires on gtk-doc. But nowhere do I see gtk3 as a
recommends.
You got that backwards. You listed the things that gtk3 has as a Recommends:
Try `dnf repoquery --whatrecommends gtk3`
java-11-openjdk-1:11.0.6.10-0.fc32.x86_64
java-11-openjdk-slowdebug-1:11.0.6.10-0.fc32.x86_64
java-latest-openjdk-1:13.0.2.8-1.rolling.fc32.x86_64
java-latest-openjdk-slowdebug-1:13.0.2.8-1.rolling.fc32.x86_64
solaar-0:1.0.2-0.1.rc1.20200322git563ef0d.fc32.noarch
That said, I think gtk3 is always part of the standard installation
because it's needed by Anaconda.