Hello Michael
In your spec file can you please explain in more details what's going on in line 76? I have seen these definitions before I just don't recall what they are for.
Best Regards,
Abdalla.
-----Original Message-----
From: Tech-talk <tech-talk-bounces at aps.anl.gov> On Behalf Of Michael Davidsaver via Tech-talk
Sent: Thursday, April 22, 2021 6:07 PM
To: Ralph Lange <ralph.lange at gmx.de>; Hu, Yong <yhu at bnl.gov>
Cc: EPICS Tech Talk <tech-talk at aps.anl.gov>
Subject: Re: RPM packages for EPICS
On 4/22/21 12:55 AM, Ralph Lange via Tech-talk wrote:
> On Wed, 21 Apr 2021 at 17:36, Johnson, Andrew N. via Tech-talk <tech-talk at aps.anl.gov <mailto:tech-talk at aps.anl.gov>> wrote:
>
> On Apr 21, 2021, at 9:43 AM, Hu, Yong <yhu at bnl.gov <mailto:yhu at bnl.gov>> wrote:
> >
> > Has any facility built, smoothly deployed and happily used RPM packages for EPICS installation of the base and popular support modules (seq, asyn, motor, streamDevice, etc.)? Please share your repositories (or building rules / specs) and your experience. Thank you!
>
> ITER has been building RPMs for all their software including EPICS modules on RHEL for many years, but I don’t believe they are allowed to share the results with the community for intellectual property reasons (administrative and legal, not for any technical reasons).
>
>
> IP issues are just a small aspect of this...
> Let me iterate (we have been presenting this at collaboration meetings).
>
> The ITER controls division builds and distributes CODAC Core System (CCS), a RHEL based Linux distribution for all control system developments in the context of the ITER project. All CCS software is packaged as RPMs.
>
> However, all CCS software modules are built using Maven. RPM packaging is done "under the hood" by a proprietary Maven ITER plugin, as a part of Maven's "package" goal, using the results of the Maven "compile" goal. Most CCS RPMs do not install in the standard RHEL system locations, but into a structure below '/opt/codac', the EPICS parts keeping the original non-standard directory structure.
>
> If you are linked to the ITER project, you can register to become a CODAC Core System user and use the complete ecosystem.
> Installing CCS RPMs on a standard RHEL system is technically possible, but as they are not generated in a standard way, do not follow all applicable Fedora / Red Hat guidelines, install in non-standard locations and often require other CCS packages, they are of very limited use outside CCS.
A relevant thread started by Abdalla Ahmad, who was/is building RPMs.
https://epics.anl.gov/tech-talk/2018/msg02078.php
In 2019 I did a proof of concept for an Osprey customer of packaging Base according to (as I understood them) the Fedora packaging rules.
So far it has not gone any further.
https://github.com/mdavidsaver/epics-base/blob/spec/epics-base.spec
I also explored the excellent Fedora COPR package building and hosting service.
https://copr.fedorainfracloud.org/coprs/mdavidsaver/epics-base/packages/
- Replies:
- Re: RPM packages for EPICS Michael Davidsaver via Tech-talk
- References:
- RPM packages for EPICS Hu, Yong via Tech-talk
- Re: RPM packages for EPICS Johnson, Andrew N. via Tech-talk
- Re: RPM packages for EPICS Ralph Lange via Tech-talk
- Re: RPM packages for EPICS Michael Davidsaver via Tech-talk
- Navigate by Date:
- Prev:
Purpose of the asynDrvUserMask interface Abdalla Ahmad via Tech-talk
- Next:
Re: Purpose of the asynDrvUserMask interface Mark Rivers via Tech-talk
- Index:
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
<2021>
2022
2023
2024
- Navigate by Thread:
- Prev:
Re: RPM packages for EPICS Michael Davidsaver via Tech-talk
- Next:
Re: RPM packages for EPICS Michael Davidsaver via Tech-talk
- Index:
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
<2021>
2022
2023
2024
|