in other words, with a normal all-precompiled distro, dkms still seems
redundant.
True, but when you add something like the NVidia proprietary drivers
which have a kernel component and aren't a part any distro due to
licensing/distribution restrictions, DKMS is a fantastic.
you missed me there. I'm sitting at a f10 machine which has
gets the nvidia binary kernel module auto-updated with each kernel.
sure, it's the rpmfusion-nonfree repo rather than fedora itself (or nvidia).
to me, I would think that a vendor would want to have some set
of baseline distros, and simply maintain their add-in drivers up-to-date
wrt distro kernel updates. to permit testing, for instance.
using dkms does indeed allow more flexibility, but I'm guessing
that there's some increase in unexpected results (such as rebuild failures).
otoh, I can't think of why yum couldn't trigger rebuilds itself as part
of resolving dependencies. maybe it does already...
I don't think it would be hard to make an RPM that had the minimal smarts
to check for an updated NV blob and rebuild appropriately. ideally,
NV would just do that themselves, and make it available via a yum repo.
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