On January 4, 2020 4:54:07 AM PST, Rich Freeman <ri...@gentoo.org> wrote:
>
>Uh, all it does is install kernel sources.  They're useless unless you
>build a kernel using them.
>
>Apparently git and tar are too complicated for Gentoo users, but
>managing symlinks, using make, managing a bootloader, dealing with the
>kernel's configuration system, and so on are just fine?
I use gentoo-sources myself, but still, I would like to propose one reason for 
keeping vanilla-sources. For me, git/tar are not too complicated, but having 
V-S in the Gentoo tree would provide another benefit: reducing the number of 
things I have to check every weekly update cycle. Every piece of software I get 
from a source other than the Gentoo tree is another website I have to visit 
every update day to check whether there’s a newer version available. So from 
that perspective, the advantage of having packages in tree that just install 
some files is that emerge tells me when a new version is available, rather than 
me having to go every week to upstream’s website and check manually (or sign up 
for countless announcement mailing lists).

Of course this would be a bad argument if V-S were lagging behind upstream 
significantly, and it’s a much better argument for packages that come with 
expectations of security team support than those that don’t, but it is 
something to consider.

-- 
Christopher Head

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