> ...I would say having SLURM rpms in EPEL could be very helpful for a lot of 
> people.
> 
> I get that this took you by surprise, but that's not a reason to not have 
> them in the repository. I, for one, will happily test if they work for me, 
> and if they do, that means that I can stop having to build them. I agree it's 
> not hard to do, but if I don't have to do it I'll be very happy about that.

There have been plenty of arguments for why having them in EPEL isn't 
necessarily the best option.  Many open source products (e.g. Postgres, Docker) 
maintain their own YUM repository online -- probably to exercise greater 
control over what's published, but also to avoid overlap with mainstream 
package repositories.  If there is value perceived in having pre-built packages 
available, then perhaps the best solution for all parties is to publish the 
packages to a unique repository:  those who want the pre-built packages 
explicitly configure their YUM to pull from that repository, those who have 
EPEL configured (which is a LOT of us) don't get overlapping Slurm packages 
interfering with their local builds.


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 Jeffrey T. Frey, Ph.D.
 Systems Programmer V & Cluster Management
 IT Research Cyberinfrastructure
      & College of Engineering
 University of Delaware, Newark DE  19716
 Office: (302) 831-6034  Mobile: (302) 419-4976
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