On Mon, 2005-02-21 at 15:41 -0500, Chuck R. Anderson wrote:
I think that adding the kernel version-release to the package name of
the kernel-module-foo packages is a bad idea. I think it would be
better to have the kernel-module-foo actual version-release tag be the
same as the corresponding kernel version-release tag. Then you could
just parallel install the kernel-module-foo packages in the same way
that the kernel is parallel installed.
Give me an example for both cases (the case you don't like and the case
that you do)?
Using a package name that never changes would avoid this problem...
Package name? Or package version? These things exist to identify the
package, not so we can work around gaps in our infrastructure.
Of course, then we have a problem if you want to update a kernel
module without updating the corresponding kernel package. Would this
happen that often?
Assume it will. :)
~spot
---
Tom "spot" Callaway: Red Hat Sales Engineer || GPG Fingerprint: 93054260
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