On Tue, Oct 07, 2008 at 08:38:43PM -0700, john wendel wrote: > Kevin Kofler wrote: >> >> If packages A and B both depend on library L and if Rawhide has a newer >> version of L with a different soname major version (the number which >> indicates which versions of a library are binary-compatible with each >> other), > > Isn't it possible to have multiple versions of a library installed? This > would let you install A and L.new and keep B and L.old, and everything > should be fine. Or am I just confused? Is this a limitation of RPM or > just a problem with the way things get packaged? > It's more like policy than a problem. Libraries have two interfaces of interest, their API (Application Programming Interface) and their ABI (Application Binary Interface). In a nutshell the API is a source code interface, the ABI a binary. Often a package will be updated in a way that changes it's ABI, meaning that thing built against it won't work any more, but without changing the API. In that case the broken apps can be fixed simply by rebuilding them against the newer version of the library. That's easily done, so it's not worth carrying multiple versions of the library. Sometimes the API changes, and applications need source changes to work with the new version, sometimes they're minor source changes, and sometimes it's a major upheaval. In that case it may be worth carrying two versions of the library; for example Fedora has gtk+ and gtk2+. The best way of pulling in something like a newer Subversion from rawhide onto an F9 system is generally to ignore the binary RPM and grab the src.rpm source code package and rebuild it against the libraries on the target distribution. That often works straight off, sometimes needs a bit of work. Ewan
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