Jason L Tibbitts III wrote:
>>>>> "RD" == Rex Dieter
<rdieter(a)math.unl.edu> writes:
RD> That's why rpmlint issues only a warning. IMO, it doesn't matter
RD> that much one way or the other as long as it still "just works".
What rpmlint chooses as a warning and what it chooses as an error seem
to be arbitrary and not generally useful for predicting how
significant the issues are. That is why I ask here.
If we're speaking in "general", then consider rpmlint errors to be
serious that deserve attention, and rpmlint warnings to be less serious
and well, you get the idea.
-- Rex