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James R. Van Zandt wrote in a message to Mike Bilow: JRVZ> The Red Hat packaging system is a lot easier to learn than JRVZ> the one for Debian. Red Hat will allow anyone to upload JRVZ> packages for their "contrib" section, and a lot of RPMs are JRVZ> available from sites other than Red Hat and their mirrors. JRVZ> (This could be considered a security concern.) JRVZ> The Debian main, contrib, and non-free sections differ only JRVZ> in their licenses. Packages in all three sections are JRVZ> prepared only by "Debian developers", and some care is taken JRVZ> to check people out before accepting their packages. JRVZ> However, by now there are over 300 of us. This is all true, but no one is restricted from posting a Debian package of their own making outside the official Debian distribution sites. As with Red Hat, anyone can create and maintain a package. The only issue is whether you are allowed to post to the official Debian sites, in which case you are obliged to maintain some standards of quality, answer inquiries, participate in the bug tracking system, and so forth. JRVZ> However, you can't build this kind of configuration into an JRVZ> ordinary RPM.) A Red Hat installation is a lot smoother than a JRVZ> Debian installation. However, I am skeptical about how JRVZ> complete it really is. This is a really serious problem in Red Hat. For example, I had the challenge of installing the Neologic chipset XFree86 drivers on a laptop. There is a Red Hat rpm for them, but no Debian package. The rpm put all the files in the right places, but I was left to modify the links and then edit XF86config by hand with vi. I don't consider this a reasonable expectation of an end user. -- Mike *** Subcription/unsubscription/info requests: send e-mail with subject of "subscribe", "unsubscribe", or "info" to discuss-request at blu.org
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