Rex Dieter wrote: > Kevin Kofler wrote: > >> Roberto Ragusa wrote: > >>> I'm not writing all the details here now, but if anyone is >>> interested, I can do it (and publish the spec files if >>> someone wants to try). >> Please don't. We don't want our users to run unsupported software, and we >> especially don't want you to make it easy for them to do that. > > As long as Roberto makes it clear that making such changes are unsupported, > and if anything breaks, you're on your own and get to keep the pieces... No doubt on that. To be considered highly unsupported. > That said, I would have much preferred that folks (like Roberto) who > want/need KDE3 made more effort to work *with* fedora and and the fedora > kde-sig to try to make sure everything is kosher. I've extended quite a few > invitations for such in the past... without any takers, so far. *shrug*. Rex, I really have considered the possibility to get involved in Fedora. I started with RedHat 5.1 (and a manually installed KDE 1), I can code in C, I am interested in KDE. But I don't think I can be productive on something as complex as KDE. I never tried to build it from source. Not even I've recompiled its src.rpm. Just satisfied dependencies. My idea was to become a Fedora packager and start with small packages which I still don't see included in Fedora. What discouraged me is the fact that I'm not sure how much time I could dedicate. And, even more, I'm a little scared by the technical and political bureaucracy of the Fedora project. I didn't investigate deeply, but I read about accounts, certificates, tickets, sponsorships, reviews... it looks like it requires quite an effort to become part of the project. > Not that I was expecting any. I'll be honest to say that my ulterior motive > was that as soon as anyone took a look at this closely and seriously, they'd > soon find out how difficult (perhaps impossible) a problem it was... I'd say it is not too difficult. Maybe KDE3 KDE4 coexistence is difficult. But KDE3 support was easy. I have made it with less effort than I thought. My crazy experiment unexpectedly succeeded with very good results. I just created compat libs packages, for two reasons: - have old versions of the libs - remove stuff conflicting at filename level with the new package (e.g. docs) An experienced packager would recompile KDE3 to link the new libs and get something better than what I have. This is the list of compat rpms to be able to run on F9: - openssl098b - openldap2339 - mikmod322 - libopensync022 For F10 you have to add: - bluez-libs-compat336 - exiv2-compat0162 - libmtp-compat0261 My KDE3 installation is quite complete. There could be something else to do for packages I do not have, but I would not describe the thing as "perhaps impossible". My opinion is that people were wrong in two things about keeping KDE3 around ("people" includes me too): - underestimated the need - overestimated the effort "Not worth spending so much time on something not really needed" Maybe we were wrong. Thank you for your time, Rex. I know how much you contribute to KDE. -- Roberto Ragusa mail at robertoragusa.it -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines