Description
Every release prior to the Feature Freeze we deprecate all the orphans. This keeps out unowned software and prevents future problems down the road.
Action
The orphan process takes place in stages:
- Detecting a list of orphans and the dependencies that will be broken if the orphans are removed.
- Sending the list of potential orphans to devel@lists.fedoraproject.org for community review and removal from the orphan list.
- Removing packages confirmed as orphans from the Fedora package repositories.
Detecting Orphans
A script called find-unblocked-orphans.py
assist in the detection process. It should be run on a machine that has koji
and python-fedora
installed. It runs without options, and should take about a minute to complete.
find-unblocked-orphans.py
is available in the Release Engineering git repository or downloaded from https://fedorahosted.org/rel-eng/browser/scripts/find-unblocked-orphans.py
Announcing Packages to be Deprecated
find-unblocked-orphans.py
outputs text to stdout on the command line in a form suitable for the body of an email message.
$ ./find-unblocked-orphans.py > email-message
Email the output to the development list (devel@lists.fedodraproject.org) at least a week before the feature freeze. This gives maintainers an opportunity to pick up orphans that are important to them. Follow-up on the list where necessary.
Blocking orphans
Once maintainers have been given an opportunity to pick up orphaned packages, the remaining packages are deprecated by blocking them, and creating the dead.package
file in cvs.
PackageDB
Use the Deprecate Package
button in PackageDB to deprecate a package. This shows interested maintainers, that the package is now deprecated. There might also be a way to do this with a command line client.
Koji
Currently (2013-08-19) we don't have a script to do this, so we re-use find-unblocked-orphans.py
to generate the list. The block-pkg koji
command is used to do the blocking.
$ koji block-pkg --help Usage: koji block-pkg [options] tag package [package2 ...] (Specify the --help global option for a list of other help options) Options: -h, --help show this help message and exit
Koji accepts multiple package names as input and thus we can use the orphan list from the find-unblocked-orphans.py
as input. Deprecated packages are only blocked from the latest dist-f##
tag. For example, if we wanted to deprecate (block) sbackup, roxterm,
and uisp
from rawhide during the development of Fedora 13 we would run the following command:
$ koji block-pkg f21 sbackup roxterm uisp
CVS
We just have to remove the existing files from the devel/
branch and replace them with a dead.package
file whos contents describe why the package is dead.
For example, if we wished to clean up CVS for the roxterm package we would:
$ CVS_RSH=ssh cvs -d :ext:cvs.fedoraproject.org:/cvs/pkgs co roxterm $ cd roxterm/devel/ $ cvs rm -f * .cvsignore $ echo "Orphan Cleanup" > dead.package $ cvs add dead.package $ cvs commit -m "Orphan Cleanup"
Bugs
This procedure probably leaves open bugs for the deprecated packages behind. It is not within the scope of releng to take care of these. If bugs are closed, only bugs targeted at Rawhide should be affected, since other branches might still be maintained.
Verification
To verify that the packages were blocked correctly we can use the latest-pkg koji
action.
$ koji latest-pkg dist-f13 wdm
This should return nothing, as the wdm
package is blocked.
Consider Before Running
Generally we block anything that doesn't leave broken dependencies. If there are orphans whose removal would result in broken dependencies a second warning should be sent to devel@lists.fedoraproject.org and to <package>-owner@fedoraproject.org for each dependent package.
Allow another couple of days for maintainers to take notice and fix these package so the package repository can be maintained without broken dependencies or needing to deprecate the package. It is not good to have broken package dependencies in our package repositories so every effort should be made to find owners or to fix the broken dependencies.