On 02/15/12 23:36, Dan McGee wrote:
On Wed, Feb 15, 2012 at 10:53 AM, jjacky <i.am.jack.mail@gmail.com> wrote:
Ok, I think I got it. But that means it would only happen if one was to do a pacman -S foobar (after having compiled/-U that package), right? Yes, one would have to do that, unless...
I thought the "would case failure on next upgrade" meant upgrading the package to a new version, or even just the next -Syu, but that is not the case. I was a smart local packager and bumped the pkgrel of the package I rebuilt, and then when a new version shows up in the repos, my version that I built locally now collides with the version that is in the sync repos. Normally this wouldn't be reinstalled, but it could be if someone set it as an explicit target.
So to have the failure, one would need to: - build a package and install it (-U) w/out changing its name (and have that new option to copy local packages to the cache of course) - then, decide to "restore" the original package, through a -S
Well, in that case I don't really see that as a problem. If one does do that, the error is to be expected after all. (And easy to fix: remove the file from the cache)
Do you feel that because of this, having an option in pacman.conf to copy files installed with -U to the cache is a bad idea? If we do this, there will be no option involved, we do not need yet another silly knob to tweak. I'm mixed on whether this is a good move, but I'm a -1 on adding any sort of option.
Besides, I was thinking anyway that when this copy to the cache occurs, pacman would first check if there's already a file by that name in there, and if so ask whether to overwrite it or not. Callbacks already suck; adding another one is also a -1 from me.
Which means, if one says yes in such a case, knowingly replacing the official package with their own rebuild in the cache, I'd say they must be ready to face the consequences. When you're manning the support desk around here, you can make that call, but until then, we like to not have to close bugs every time preventable problems like this get reported.
Pro tip, to show that this really isn't a big deal at all and there is already a workaround: just add 'file://' to your path and be done with it. Bam, the downloader kicks in, copies it to your local package cache, and off you go. No new option necessary, no new code, it works today.
Oh, nice. Didn't realize this was possible for some reason, thanks. Yeah that'll work fine. -j
-Dan