DebForMeeGo
(→Why keep deb: deb doesn't have wider adoption) |
(→Why switch to rpm: LSB) |
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== Why switch to rpm == | == Why switch to rpm == | ||
* No porting for Moblin packages needed | * No porting for Moblin packages needed | ||
+ | * RPM is LSB-compilant. (standartiztion issue with deb though) | ||
* Moblin build infrastructure has more capabilities already in place, such as imaging. | * Moblin build infrastructure has more capabilities already in place, such as imaging. | ||
* RPMs can contain license information too | * RPMs can contain license information too |
Revision as of 23:08, 18 February 2010
This page collects all arguments for and against keeping the *.deb package format in MeeGo.
If you want to support this Idea you can vote at Brainstorm.
Contents |
Scope
the aim is at least to keep the *.deb package format in the MeeGo distributions aiming at Nokia Phones/ Handhelds. Although using the .deb format throughout the MeeGo project is desireable, not arguments here apply to the same extend looking at the whole project.
Why keep deb
- No porting for Maemo packages needed
- Maemo has the bigger community
- community infrastructure is based on deb - would be thrown away
- allows syncing from Debian/ Ubuntu
- is used for distributions targetting end users
- packages contain lots of related fixes
- not to throw away experience gained with maemo which is reflected in the packaging
- deb package can contain license information into the XBS-License field of the control file.
- will be the first packaging system to allow multiarch.
- seems to be already tested in multi-arch (even optimized versions per arch using multiple architectures), while RPM seems to be immature in that area (RPM expert's comment needed)
- tools for verifying (e.g. lintian) available
Why switch to rpm
- No porting for Moblin packages needed
- RPM is LSB-compilant. (standartiztion issue with deb though)
- Moblin build infrastructure has more capabilities already in place, such as imaging.
- RPMs can contain license information too
- rpmlint can be used to check for a package quality (like lintian)
Alternative Solution
- Keep a Debian base system, and provide third-party applications in an LSB package formet (which is RPM inside). LSB-compliant RPM should install flawlessly, and that way the frontier between system packages (DEB) and third-party applications (RPM) is well defined.
- Add the imaging feature to the Deb package.