Rex Dieter <rdieter <at> math.unl.edu> writes: > Time commitment would likely be proportional to your expections of quality > and continuing support. To do well, and if *I* were doing it, my estimations > would be at least ~6 hours up front, including pkg builds, hosting, > deployment, plus who know how much extra time/effort for onging support and > bugfixes. I think that's very optimistic. I'd expect the successful builds alone to take at least 2 days; adding all the specfile editing and fixing, that would be at least a week of work. The edits are nontrivial, for example one has to bump the Epoch (or change the Name) everywhere so the packages don't get replaced by the KDE 4 version in the F9 repo, and then adjust the other packages to refer to the correct Name or Epoch. It's easier to backport a new version to an old distro (like you are doing for kde-redhat unstable) than to forward-port an old version to a new distro, due to how RPM works. To do the work properly (and here we are at your "expectations of quality" point), one also has to track down the stuff which depends on KDE (not just kdelibs, but e.g. kdebase(-workspace)) and rebuild it for KDE 3, possibly undoing the changes done in F9 to make it use KDE 4. For example compiz. That's potentially weeks of work, also counting the time needed to track down all the stuff which has to be reverted. If that is not done, then some packages (like compiz) will not be usable with those KDE 3 packages. All in all it would be a colossal effort, probably ending up with an unsupportable mix of Fedora 8 and 9, and with a target audience much less tolerant of problems than the clientele of kde-redhat unstable (because problems are what drives people to ask for KDE 3 in the first place). Kevin Kofler -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list