[aur-general] Aurphan in community
I would like to move Aurphan into community. I've added a number of features to it lately, and it has become an automated means of answering "what can I do to help Arch", parsing and summarizing the todo list, the bugtracker and the orphans. The one random dev I've asked seems cool with it, however he thought a wider consensus should be found. It has enough votes but.... Aurphan could be considered an AUR helper. By default it searches the AUR for AUR packages you already have installed. It does not download anything. I will change it so the default behavior does not search the AUR. (New default would display the --help) I won't change the name, on account of it being cute. aur page: http://aur.archlinux.org/packages.php?ID=43726 project page: http://kmkeen.com/aurphan/ -Kyle http://kmkeen.com
On Fri 29 Apr 2011 21:49 -0400, keenerd wrote:
I would like to move Aurphan into community. I've added a number of features to it lately, and it has become an automated means of answering "what can I do to help Arch", parsing and summarizing the todo list, the bugtracker and the orphans. The one random dev I've asked seems cool with it, however he thought a wider consensus should be found. It has enough votes but....
Aurphan could be considered an AUR helper. By default it searches the AUR for AUR packages you already have installed. It does not download anything.
I will change it so the default behavior does not search the AUR. (New default would display the --help) I won't change the name, on account of it being cute.
aur page: http://aur.archlinux.org/packages.php?ID=43726 project page: http://kmkeen.com/aurphan/
This script seems like a really nice idea, but if it deals with unsupported packages it should remain in that domain. Maybe move the functionality that deals with unsupported into an add-on that you can install separately?
On 30/04/11 12:25, Loui Chang wrote:
On Fri 29 Apr 2011 21:49 -0400, keenerd wrote:
I would like to move Aurphan into community. I've added a number of features to it lately, and it has become an automated means of answering "what can I do to help Arch", parsing and summarizing the todo list, the bugtracker and the orphans. The one random dev I've asked seems cool with it, however he thought a wider consensus should be found. It has enough votes but....
Aurphan could be considered an AUR helper. By default it searches the AUR for AUR packages you already have installed. It does not download anything.
I will change it so the default behavior does not search the AUR. (New default would display the --help) I won't change the name, on account of it being cute.
aur page: http://aur.archlinux.org/packages.php?ID=43726 project page: http://kmkeen.com/aurphan/
This script seems like a really nice idea, but if it deals with unsupported packages it should remain in that domain. Maybe move the functionality that deals with unsupported into an add-on that you can install separately?
We should also drop wget, curl and firefox from the repos as they can be used to download unsupported packages... In fact, this script is safer because it does not even do that. Allan
On Sat 30 Apr 2011 16:12 +1000, Allan McRae wrote:
On 30/04/11 12:25, Loui Chang wrote:
On Fri 29 Apr 2011 21:49 -0400, keenerd wrote:
I would like to move Aurphan into community. I've added a number of features to it lately, and it has become an automated means of answering "what can I do to help Arch", parsing and summarizing the todo list, the bugtracker and the orphans. The one random dev I've asked seems cool with it, however he thought a wider consensus should be found. It has enough votes but....
Aurphan could be considered an AUR helper. By default it searches the AUR for AUR packages you already have installed. It does not download anything.
I will change it so the default behavior does not search the AUR. (New default would display the --help) I won't change the name, on account of it being cute.
aur page: http://aur.archlinux.org/packages.php?ID=43726 project page: http://kmkeen.com/aurphan/
This script seems like a really nice idea, but if it deals with unsupported packages it should remain in that domain. Maybe move the functionality that deals with unsupported into an add-on that you can install separately?
We should also drop wget, curl and firefox from the repos as they can be used to download unsupported packages... In fact, this script is safer because it does not even do that.
Allan, I appreciate your work but you completely missed the point. wget, curl and firefox do not contain functionality to specifically access the unsupported packages. They are general network programs. I guess it depends on what your vision is. If you want more people expecting support for unsupported packages, then put these scripts into extra or community. I can't stop you, I'm just a lowly nobody and you're a big bad dev.
On 30/04/11 17:36, Loui Chang wrote:
On Sat 30 Apr 2011 16:12 +1000, Allan McRae wrote:
On 30/04/11 12:25, Loui Chang wrote:
On Fri 29 Apr 2011 21:49 -0400, keenerd wrote:
I would like to move Aurphan into community. I've added a number of features to it lately, and it has become an automated means of answering "what can I do to help Arch", parsing and summarizing the todo list, the bugtracker and the orphans. The one random dev I've asked seems cool with it, however he thought a wider consensus should be found. It has enough votes but....
Aurphan could be considered an AUR helper. By default it searches the AUR for AUR packages you already have installed. It does not download anything.
I will change it so the default behavior does not search the AUR. (New default would display the --help) I won't change the name, on account of it being cute.
aur page: http://aur.archlinux.org/packages.php?ID=43726 project page: http://kmkeen.com/aurphan/
This script seems like a really nice idea, but if it deals with unsupported packages it should remain in that domain. Maybe move the functionality that deals with unsupported into an add-on that you can install separately?
We should also drop wget, curl and firefox from the repos as they can be used to download unsupported packages... In fact, this script is safer because it does not even do that.
Allan, I appreciate your work but you completely missed the point. wget, curl and firefox do not contain functionality to specifically access the unsupported packages. They are general network programs.
I guess it depends on what your vision is. If you want more people expecting support for unsupported packages, then put these scripts into extra or community. I can't stop you, I'm just a lowly nobody and you're a big bad dev.
My point was that (as far as I can tell) this software does nothing with AUR packages other than collates a bit of information. It does not allow downloading or building packages. I find it difficult to see how this could be seen as supporting AUR packages. Allan
Am 30.04.2011 10:10, schrieb Allan McRae:
On 30/04/11 17:36, Loui Chang wrote:
On Sat 30 Apr 2011 16:12 +1000, Allan McRae wrote:
On 30/04/11 12:25, Loui Chang wrote:
On Fri 29 Apr 2011 21:49 -0400, keenerd wrote:
I would like to move Aurphan into community. I've added a number of features to it lately, and it has become an automated means of answering "what can I do to help Arch", parsing and summarizing the todo list, the bugtracker and the orphans. The one random dev I've asked seems cool with it, however he thought a wider consensus should be found. It has enough votes but....
Aurphan could be considered an AUR helper. By default it searches the AUR for AUR packages you already have installed. It does not download anything.
I will change it so the default behavior does not search the AUR. (New default would display the --help) I won't change the name, on account of it being cute.
aur page: http://aur.archlinux.org/packages.php?ID=43726 project page: http://kmkeen.com/aurphan/
This script seems like a really nice idea, but if it deals with unsupported packages it should remain in that domain. Maybe move the functionality that deals with unsupported into an add-on that you can install separately?
We should also drop wget, curl and firefox from the repos as they can be used to download unsupported packages... In fact, this script is safer because it does not even do that.
Allan, I appreciate your work but you completely missed the point. wget, curl and firefox do not contain functionality to specifically access the unsupported packages. They are general network programs.
I guess it depends on what your vision is. If you want more people expecting support for unsupported packages, then put these scripts into extra or community. I can't stop you, I'm just a lowly nobody and you're a big bad dev.
My point was that (as far as I can tell) this software does nothing with AUR packages other than collates a bit of information. It does not allow downloading or building packages. I find it difficult to see how this could be seen as supporting AUR packages.
Allan
I think aurphan does not support aur packages but it eases to have better quality of the AUR as such, in recruiting more maintainers and having less orphaned packages there. We should support this. So go for it, Kyle! Regards Stefan
On 30 April 2011 17:48, Stefan Husmann <stefan-husmann@t-online.de> wrote:
Am 30.04.2011 10:10, schrieb Allan McRae:
On 30/04/11 17:36, Loui Chang wrote:
On Sat 30 Apr 2011 16:12 +1000, Allan McRae wrote:
On 30/04/11 12:25, Loui Chang wrote:
On Fri 29 Apr 2011 21:49 -0400, keenerd wrote:
I would like to move Aurphan into community. I've added a number of features to it lately, and it has become an automated means of answering "what can I do to help Arch", parsing and summarizing the todo list, the bugtracker and the orphans. The one random dev I've asked seems cool with it, however he thought a wider consensus should be found. It has enough votes but....
Aurphan could be considered an AUR helper. By default it searches the AUR for AUR packages you already have installed. It does not download anything.
I will change it so the default behavior does not search the AUR. (New default would display the --help) I won't change the name, on account of it being cute.
aur page: http://aur.archlinux.org/packages.php?ID=43726 project page: http://kmkeen.com/aurphan/
This script seems like a really nice idea, but if it deals with unsupported packages it should remain in that domain. Maybe move the functionality that deals with unsupported into an add-on that you can install separately?
We should also drop wget, curl and firefox from the repos as they can be used to download unsupported packages... In fact, this script is safer because it does not even do that.
Allan, I appreciate your work but you completely missed the point. wget, curl and firefox do not contain functionality to specifically access the unsupported packages. They are general network programs.
I guess it depends on what your vision is. If you want more people expecting support for unsupported packages, then put these scripts into extra or community. I can't stop you, I'm just a lowly nobody and you're a big bad dev.
My point was that (as far as I can tell) this software does nothing with AUR packages other than collates a bit of information. It does not allow downloading or building packages. I find it difficult to see how this could be seen as supporting AUR packages.
Allan
I think aurphan does not support aur packages but it eases to have better quality of the AUR as such, in recruiting more maintainers and having less orphaned packages there. We should support this. So go for it, Kyle!
Let me just confirm this: it is the first of its kind, in that it "communicates" with the AUR. There is no other tool in the repos that makes a connection to the AUR, right? -- GPG/PGP ID: 8AADBB10
On 5/6/11, Ray Rashif <schiv@archlinux.org> wrote:
Let me just confirm this: it is the first of its kind, in that it "communicates" with the AUR. There is no other tool in the repos that makes a connection to the AUR, right?
Well that depends. Do you count community/arch-firefox-search, which does a full search of the AUR? (On an unrelated note, why is searching the AUR in a GUI officially supported but searching it from the CLI a mortal sin?) Aurphan does not search the AUR, it organizes info about the AUR packages you already have installed. It does not imply AUR packages are supported, it asks you to volunteer support for them. -Kyle http://kmkeen.com
On 6 May 2011 21:13, keenerd <keenerd@gmail.com> wrote:
On 5/6/11, Ray Rashif <schiv@archlinux.org> wrote:
Let me just confirm this: it is the first of its kind, in that it "communicates" with the AUR. There is no other tool in the repos that makes a connection to the AUR, right?
Well that depends. Do you count community/arch-firefox-search, which does a full search of the AUR? (On an unrelated note, why is searching the AUR in a GUI officially supported but searching it from the CLI a mortal sin?)
Yes, I'd count that. Now, on the unrelated note: the search engine is for a web browser, and is in line with the AUR web interface. This interaction with the AUR is "indirect". That is why it is _not_ on a grey area. A tool searching from the CLI (with which one has "direct" access), is on a grey area. That is IMO; no consensus has been reached with regards to whether searching can be accepted/supported (officially) - only discussions.
Aurphan does not search the AUR, it organizes info about the AUR packages you already have installed. It does not imply AUR packages are supported, it asks you to volunteer support for them.
Yes, it initiates a connection to the AUR, that is all. I have nothing against this myself, so +1. -- GPG/PGP ID: 8AADBB10
Loui Chang wrote:
On Fri 29 Apr 2011 21:49 -0400, keenerd wrote:
I would like to move Aurphan into community. I've added a number of features to it lately, and it has become an automated means of answering "what can I do to help Arch", parsing and summarizing the todo list, the bugtracker and the orphans. The one random dev I've asked seems cool with it, however he thought a wider consensus should be found. It has enough votes but....
Aurphan could be considered an AUR helper. By default it searches the AUR for AUR packages you already have installed. It does not download anything.
I will change it so the default behavior does not search the AUR. (New default would display the --help) I won't change the name, on account of it being cute.
aur page: http://aur.archlinux.org/packages.php?ID=43726 project page: http://kmkeen.com/aurphan/
This script seems like a really nice idea, but if it deals with unsupported packages it should remain in that domain. Maybe move the functionality that deals with unsupported into an add-on that you can install separately?
Didn't the extremely popular powerpill also have support for the AUR? Although i had never used it, i seem to recall it did, and it was in community. Also from your reply on [0] and particularly the "Functionality needs to be moved to the clients for the better future of the AUR." part, i got the impression that the TU's might actually be considering creating or baptising an AUR client official pretty soon. Or even many, by including them in community. The AUR isn't usable 100% from the web interface like it was before and users are pratically forced to use one of the many unofficial clients. Considering that and your reply it would make sense doing so. [0]: http://article.gmane.org/gmane.linux.arch.tur.user/19831 ( from http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.linux.arch.tur.user/19798 ) ---- Greg
On Sat 30 Apr 2011 09:39 +0300, Grigorios Bouzakis wrote:
Loui Chang wrote:
On Fri 29 Apr 2011 21:49 -0400, keenerd wrote:
I would like to move Aurphan into community. I've added a number of features to it lately, and it has become an automated means of answering "what can I do to help Arch", parsing and summarizing the todo list, the bugtracker and the orphans. The one random dev I've asked seems cool with it, however he thought a wider consensus should be found. It has enough votes but....
Aurphan could be considered an AUR helper. By default it searches the AUR for AUR packages you already have installed. It does not download anything.
I will change it so the default behavior does not search the AUR. (New default would display the --help) I won't change the name, on account of it being cute.
aur page: http://aur.archlinux.org/packages.php?ID=43726 project page: http://kmkeen.com/aurphan/
This script seems like a really nice idea, but if it deals with unsupported packages it should remain in that domain. Maybe move the functionality that deals with unsupported into an add-on that you can install separately?
Didn't the extremely popular powerpill also have support for the AUR? Although i had never used it, i seem to recall it did, and it was in community.
Powerpill was always a pacman wrapper that had no interface to the AUR. You could however install an add-on called bauerbill which would give you functionality with the AUR. Though aurbuild did briefly make its appearance into [community] many years ago, it was quickly removed for obvious reasons. The only official client for the AUR that remained for any time was called aurtools and it was part of the system that TUs used for submitting binary packages to [community] only.
Also from your reply on [0] and particularly the "Functionality needs to be moved to the clients for the better future of the AUR." part, i got the impression that the TU's might actually be considering creating or baptising an AUR client official pretty soon.
I did kind of think that it might be a good idea to have a minimal official client, but that's no longer the case. Arch has no official client for you to utilize its web service, nor its email service. I'll maintain there should be no official client for the AUR either. Maybe a minimal reference client could be useful for testing purposes though.
The AUR isn't usable 100% from the web interface like it was before and users are pratically forced to use one of the many
The web interface seems to work perfectly fine for me.
participants (6)
-
Allan McRae
-
Grigorios Bouzakis
-
keenerd
-
Loui Chang
-
Ray Rashif
-
Stefan Husmann