> On Sun, 7 Sep 2014, Rich Freeman wrote:
> Right now the general policy is that we don't allow unmasked (hard or
> via keywords) ebuilds in the tree if they use an scm to fetch their
> sources. There are a bunch of reasons for this, and for the most part
> they make sense.
> I was wondering
This discussion has now become rather OT and does not belong
to this list. Anyway, since there appear to be some misunderstandings
concerning my previous remarks, I contribute one more post.
Duncan <1i5t5.dun...@cox.net> wrote:
>>> > > > Please don't. Not all communication partners are linux users
On 09/07/14 22:36, Patrick Lauer wrote:
On Saturday 06 September 2014 16:22:46 hasufell wrote:
Anthony G. Basile:
On 09/06/14 12:12, hasufell wrote:
Anthony G. Basile:
And when you do ask, is a package that's "provided" installed, and if
so, what's its metadata?
When the package is installed
Patrick Lauer:
> On Saturday 06 September 2014 16:22:46 hasufell wrote:
>> Anthony G. Basile:
>>> On 09/06/14 12:12, hasufell wrote:
Anthony G. Basile:
>> And when you do ask, is a package that's "provided" installed, and if
>> so, what's its metadata?
>
> When the package is i
Anthony G. Basile:
> On 09/07/14 22:36, Patrick Lauer wrote:
>> On Saturday 06 September 2014 16:22:46 hasufell wrote:
>>> Anthony G. Basile:
On 09/06/14 12:12, hasufell wrote:
> Anthony G. Basile:
>>> And when you do ask, is a package that's "provided" installed,
>>> and if
>>
> >> That means either say "you cannot expect anything, because there might
> >> or might not be metadata" or say "you can expect metadata for any
> >> provided/installed package" in which case package.provided feature has
> >> to be removed from portage.
> >
> > "Provided" means "not managed by
Patrick Lauer:
>
That means either say "you cannot expect anything, because there might
or might not be metadata" or say "you can expect metadata for any
provided/installed package" in which case package.provided feature has
to be removed from portage.
>>>
>>> "Provided" means
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Check out Linphone. Works well to Mac OS X and Microsoft Windows in my
experience. The interface is not great, but several non-technical
users have been able to use it to talk to me, so it can't be that bad
while we're waiting for Tox to mature.
Usi