Discussion:
[fedora-arm] How to propose the inclusion of a package
Alessio Ciregia
2017-06-06 16:02:36 UTC
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What is the correct way to propose the inclusion of a package in an image?

I think that the command 'nmtui' contained in the package NetworkManager-tui,
could be useful in the Fedora-Server arm image.
Such package is installed by default in the Minimal image (I have not
checked if it is also in the XFCE one).

Thanks,
A.
Peter Robinson
2017-06-06 16:08:40 UTC
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Post by Alessio Ciregia
What is the correct way to propose the inclusion of a package in an image?
I think that the command 'nmtui' contained in the package
NetworkManager-tui, could be useful in the Fedora-Server arm image.
Such package is installed by default in the Minimal image (I have not
checked if it is also in the XFCE one).
I believe that issue, and that of WiFi support should be resolved just
as soon as we come out of beta freeze
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Alessio Ciregia
2017-06-10 05:56:52 UTC
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Post by Alessio Ciregia
What is the correct way to propose the inclusion of a package in an image?
I believe that issue, and that of WiFi support should be resolved just
as soon as we come out of beta freeze


In addition. May it look logical to ship arm images with smartd service
disabled by default? After all, how many arm devices are capable of that in
their basic configuration?

Ciao
A.
Peter Robinson
2017-06-10 07:14:11 UTC
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Post by Peter Robinson
Post by Alessio Ciregia
What is the correct way to propose the inclusion of a package in an image?
I believe that issue, and that of WiFi support should be resolved just
as soon as we come out of beta freeze
In addition. May it look logical to ship arm images with smartd service
disabled by default? After all, how many arm devices are capable of that in
their basic configuration?
Probably about half, not including if people use USB disks with them,
it doesn't hurt it running without disks.
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Alessio Ciregia
2017-06-10 07:25:53 UTC
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On Jun 10, 2017 09:14, "Peter Robinson" <***@gmail.com> wrote:


Probably about half, not including if people use USB disks with them,
it doesn't hurt it running without disks.


This is true.

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