On 28/07/12 13:04, Jeremiah Dodds wrote:
Sorry if this is dragging up an old topic, but I've been poking around AIF as I'm interested in possibly (hopefully) bringing it up to speed and/or improving it, and I noticed that it's still in the repos, but isn't installable by anyone who doesn't happen to have grub legacy still installed on their system, unless I'm missing something.
It seems like we'd want to avoid having to manually remove packages every time it becomes impossible to install a set of them. This might be my unfamiliarity with libalpm or pacman or any other myriad part of the stack, but it seems like the type of thing that could be handled by a utlity and a cron job fairly easily.
It also seems like the type of thing that wouldn't be too annoying to deal with manually at the moment, but that could get frustrating for both users and devs down the line. Menial maintanence tasks like that[1] tend to end up sucking down a lot of people's time and energy in the long run, in my experience.
If the lack of an automated "dead package remover" is just a "lack of time / patches welcome" type of thing, I'd volunteer to take a crack at writing the thing. If it isn't, I'd really like to know why.
Footnotes: [1] unless, of course, it's not actually a menial task, in which case please enlighten me
pacman -Sdd aif Btw you could just use the AIF git repo and I guess the package will soon be removed from the repos anyway. -- Jelle van der Waa