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Re: [PATCH] gnu: Add glibc-locales variants for older versions of glibc.
From: |
Ludovic Courtès |
Subject: |
Re: [PATCH] gnu: Add glibc-locales variants for older versions of glibc. |
Date: |
Tue, 22 Jan 2019 14:16:06 +0100 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/26.1 (gnu/linux) |
Hello,
Ricardo Wurmus <address@hidden> skribis:
>>> * gnu/packages/base.scm (make-glibc-locales, make-glibc-utf8-locales): New
>>> procedures.
>>> (glibc-locales): Express in terms of make-glibc-locales.
>>> (glibc-utf8-locales): Express in terms of make-glibc-utf8-locales.
>>> (glibc-locales-2.27, glibc-utf8-locales-2.27): New variables.
>
> […]
>
>> I don’t like the package name trick, but I don’t have a better solution.
>> Perhaps we could have a special property to explicitly allow for several
>> versions of this package in the same profile (say
>> ‘allow-multiple-versions?’), but that’s a bit more work.
>
> I also don’t like to work around this by changing the package names. I
> thought of allowing multiple versions via property, but it’s not clear
> how it should behave. I’d want to have only major versions appear as
> non-conflicting and still prevent the installation of variants of the
> same version.
>
> The next question then is if the property should be a procedure that
> takes the current and the potentially conflicting package as arguments
> and decides whether they are conflicting, or if this should be handled
> centrally when the property is present.
Would there be other use cases? If not, I would not worry too much
about the major vs. non-major conflicts.
I have a slight preference for a property that we can ‘write’, which
would simplify for instance interaction with inferior packages, hence
something like a Boolean ‘allow-multiple-versions?’ property.
As a first approach, when this flag is true, the version check in
‘check-for-collisions’ could be bypassed. The property would have to be
added to the <manifest-entry> though, so that the flag is honored even
after several “guix package” invocations.
How does that sound?
Thanks,
Ludo’.