backup systems. (Use Amanda!!)
Derek Atkins
warlord at MIT.EDU
Fri Apr 11 19:56:14 EDT 2003
Derek Martin <blu at sophic.org> writes:
> On Fri, Apr 11, 2003 at 04:04:37PM -0400, Derek Atkins wrote:
> > > If it came from Red Hat's RPMs, it's got a SRPM. If there's no SRPM,
> > > don't install it in /usr.
> >
> > Not all RPMS come from Red Hat, and not all RPMS are relocatable.
> > I've got a bunch of RPMS that I use that do not have associated SRPMS
> > but are also not relocatable. They are part of Linux-Athena, and get
> > updates as part of the Linux-Athena update process (along with the Red
> > Hat RPMS).
>
> If you fixed a bug and re-built the software, as you said you did,
> then you've obviously got the source. You can:
The bug wasn't in the compiled sources -- it was in some ancillary
scripting (as I've said a couple of times). I did not have the
complete package sources.
> - build a source RPM yourself (you're already building the software
> yourself, so building SRPMs isn't much additional effort)
> - don't install it as an RPM, install it from source
>
> The mere existence of the RPMs indicates that SOMEONE already has a
> spec file. If it's not included with the sources, you can probably
> ask whoever distributes the RPMs for a copy of it. Then, building
> your own SRPMS should be trivial.
TMO. Easier to file the bug report with the script patch and wait
for an update.
> I may be alone in this, but you seem to me to be going to a tremendous
> amount of trouble to make it appear that a normal, reasonable back-up
> scheme, which simply excludes the directories where distro files
> live, doesn't meet your needs, when by all appearances it does,
> practically speaking. You may need to make minor adjustments to the
> way you think about administering your systems, but that's a lot less
> work than engineering your own back-up system from scratch. But if
> you're hell-bent on doing that, then I say go for it. No doubt lots
> of other people would find it useful. I might even use it myself. It
> just seems like a lot of work, for insubstantal practical benefit, to
> me.
I have no guarantee that there are no non-distro files in some
of those locations. I don't think it unreasonable to ask a backup
system not to back up the original OS installation.
-derek
--
Derek Atkins, SB '93 MIT EE, SM '95 MIT Media Laboratory
Member, MIT Student Information Processing Board (SIPB)
URL: http://web.mit.edu/warlord/ PP-ASEL-IA N1NWH
warlord at MIT.EDU PGP key available
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