Am 03.12.2010 19:46, schrieb keenerd:
Officially, the tarballs uploaded to the AUR should be named after their package, contain a directory named after their package, contain no dot files and most importantly contain no binaries. Officially, these requirements are very important.
Here are a bunch of non-conforming packages. Maybe 90% of them. (A few errors slip though my scanner.)
Of the +700 packages with binaries, most are a simple desktop icon. Should these be base64 encoded if someone can't find hosting?
If no one can think of a better way to deal with the nonconforming packages, I'll write a bot to post insulting comments. Personally, I really like this solution. The AUR has always had a wild west frontier / insane asylum feel to it. The less regulation, the better it works. But a few well placed suggestions could help make the two thousand maintainers do a better job.
-Kyle
Hello, I think, icon files should be tolerated, and always have been (since I use Arch Linux), if there is a desktop file and no downloadable icon delivered upstream. Having desktop files which point to an icon but not having the icon itself does not make much sense to me. Yes, taken verbatim, icons fall under binaries. But the spirit behind the restriction is that binaries often meen "executable binaries" which are virtually always downloadable or build by the makepkg step. Regards Stefan