Le jeudi 07 décembre 2017 à 13:05 +0100, Dominique Leuenberger / DimStar a écrit : > On Thu, 2017-12-07 at 12:56 +0100, Gerald Pfeifer wrote: > > > > Trying to lighten my desktop a little, I checked what happens when > > I remove evolution-data-server. > > > > Most of this is logical > > > > empathy evolution-data-server gnome-contacts gnome-maps > > gnome-shell-calendar gnome-shell-search-provider-contacts > > libebackend-1_2-10 libebook-1_2-19 libebook-contacts-1_2-2 > > libecal-1_2-19 libedata-book-1_2-25 libedata-cal-1_2-28 > > libedataserver-1_2-22 libedataserverui-1_2-1 libfolks-eds25 > > libfolks-telepathy25 libfolks25 typelib-1_0-GFBGraph-0_2 > > > > but gnome-maps? Isn't that a bit much to depend on evolution-data- > > server? > > Could that be a "soft" dependency instead of a hard requirements? > > > gnome-maps links into the evolution address book - you can enter > Contact Names into the Search field in GNOME Maps; for this it needs > the integration with evolution-data-server. > > The dependency though is not in gnome-maps itself, but is abstracted > over folks. > > But the current design of gnome-maps's does not allow to split out > such > consumer into optional packages, as it is all linked into a > monolithic > gnome-maps library.
But uninstalling / locking libfolks-eds25 should prevent evolution- data-server to be installed, while keeping gnome-maps. -- Frederic Crozat Enterprise Desktop Release Manager SUSE -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected] To contact the owner, e-mail: [email protected]
