On Mon, Nov 19, 2007 at 11:26:02AM +0200, Roman Kyrylych wrote:
2007/11/18, Dan McGee <dan@archlinux.org>:
This is an automated email from the git hooks/post-receive script. It was generated because a ref change was pushed to the repository containing the project "The official pacman repository".
commit 829a7b904dcb56aa17cd9279f29385dad2814793 Author: Chantry Xavier <shiningxc@gmail.com> Date: Sat Nov 17 23:35:22 2007 +0100
Minor rephrasing of the question asked by -Sc.
Suggested by stonecrest on irc : 'I think "uninstalled" would be better, as it implies that the package was once installed and since removed. Otherwise a user might wonder why there are non-installed pkgs in cache'
Signed-off-by: Chantry Xavier <shiningxc@gmail.com>
This also includes packages pulled with -Sw[u] but not [yet] installed. ;-) Though the majority of -Sc candidates will be uninstalled packages anyway.
Eheh, I replied exactly the same with -Sw :) But it's a corner case indeed.
commit 8f824e70bbaf9cb2b72103fe378d93e3ded8cdee Author: Chantry Xavier <shiningxc@gmail.com> Date: Fri Nov 16 15:34:04 2007 +0100
Remove the IgnorePkg handling from alpm_pkg_compare_version.
And check the IgnorePkg handling is done correctly in the other places. For example, -Qu and -Su will automatically skip the ignored packages (-Su will print a warning), but -S will install ignored packages anyway, because it was asked explicitly.
Signed-off-by: Chantry Xavier <shiningxc@gmail.com>
The fact that -S <pkgname> ignores IgnorePkg=<pkgname> should be documented in manpage.
Note that the previous behavior (just before my patch) was a bit strange : -S <pkgname> looked at IgnorePkg only if pkgname was already locally installed. I checked the man page, this is the doc for IgnorePkg , in pacman.conf : IgnorePkg = package ... Instructs pacman to ignore any upgrades for this package when performing a --sysupgrade. And well, I think thats the only case where IgnorePkg / --ignore usage makes sense anyway.
commit e174865bdc154248b8b8fcf03eaa19da78e0f67b Author: Dan McGee <dan@archlinux.org> Date: Sat Nov 17 12:56:31 2007 -0600
Don't filter package files output based on dir/file status
This caused more problems than it solved, especially with -Qlp output and files that are new to the new package.
Signed-off-by: Dan McGee <dan@archlinux.org>
So it will be possible to find what an ugly package brought some empty dir. :-)
That's also the advantage I saw in this patch, after the perl package problem.