Rationale
rpm/yum treat a dependency (Requires) on “foo” as satisfiable by any available foo, regardless of architecture. The consequence of this is that on multilib systems, when the architecture of a dependency has not been specified (even though it is important), yum can install the wrong architecture build of the dependency—resulting in, most likely, a nonfunctional installation. This can happen when, for some reason, the correct architecture is not available to yum or (somewhat more importantly) the opposite arch. than the one desired is already installed.
Making Requires Arch-Specific
Explicit requires must be made arch-specific by appending the macro %{?_isa}
to the package name. For instance,
Requires: foo
becomes
Requires: foo%{?_isa}
...full documentation can be seen at The rpm Wiki page, on Arch requires.
When To Do It
If a dependency really can be satisfied by a build for any architecture, clearly there's no reason to make the dependency architecture-specific. But it does matter in these scenarios:
- A library in the dependency is
dlopen
'd. - A non-noarch
-devel
package depends on another-devel
package. - A non-noarch subpackage's dependency on its main package (Eg. libfoo-devel depends on libfoo).
So, unless you have a very good reason to not make an explicit dependency architecture specific (and if so, be sure to document it in the spec file with a comment), you MUST do it.
When NOT To Do It
Making a general requirement more specific rarely produces significant problems. However there is at least one scenario where you should never use arch. specific requires:
- A package has a Build-Requires on a specific arch. library (because rpmbuild evaluates the %{_isa} at .src.rpm buildtime, and not at .src.rpm => .arch.rpm build time).