Addition to ReviewGuidelines
MUST: An RPM package's list of dependencies must not contain any unnecessary explicit Requires.
SHOULD: Anything in the spec file which is not obvious should have a comment explaining it.
Addition to Packaging Guidelines
Explicit Requires
Packages should not contain superfluous explicit Requires within the spec file, except when absolutely necessary. Any explicit Requires should be explained with comments in the spec file.
In particular, we rely on rpmbuild's automatically added dependencies on library SONAMEs. Modern package management tools are capable of resolving such dependencies to determine the required packages. Explicit dependencies on specific package names may aid the inexperienced user, who attempts at installing RPM packages manually. However, history has shown that such dependencies add confusion when library/files are moved from one package to another, when packages get renamed, when one out of multiple alternative packages would suffice, and when versioned explicit dependencies become out-of-date and inaccurate. Additionally, in some cases, old explicit dependencies on package names require unnecessary updates/rebuilds. For example, Fedora packages are only required to retain historical provides for two full release cycles.
Exemplary rationale for a versioned explicit dependency:
# The automatic dependency on libfubar.so.1 is insufficient, # as we strictly need at least the release that fixes two segfaults. Requires: libfubar >= 0:1.2.3-7
Packagers should revisit an explicit dependency as appropriate to avoid that it becomes inaccurate and superfluous.
Non-Obvious Items in Spec Files
Anything in the spec file which is not obvious should have a comment explaining it.
Some examples of non-obvious items include (but are not limited to):
- Some explicit requires
- FHS violations
- Changes to optflags
- Not using
%configure
or make install - Provides/Obsoletes
- Modified tarballs
- Licensing or legal related changes