Package rpminstall-tests: Information

  • Default inline alert: Version in the repository: 1.1.3-alt8

Source package: rpminstall-tests
Version: 1.1.3-alt5
Latest version according to Repology
Build time:  Jul 3, 2020, 06:15 PM in the task #254176
Report package bug
License: GPLv2+
Summary: Tests for rpm: how it interprets packages when installing
Description: 
Tests for rpm: how it interprets packages when installing.

Now, it tests how various forms of constraints (Requires, Conflicts, Obsoletes)
are interpreted when they are installed together with packages with
various forms of matching Provides.

More tests can appear.

List of rpms provided by this srpm:
rpminstall-tests (noarch)
rpminstall-tests-archcompat-checkinstall (noarch)
rpminstall-tests-archcompat-with-proc-checkinstall (noarch)
rpminstall-tests-checkinstall (noarch)

Maintainer: Ivan Zakharyaschev

List of contributors:
Ivan Zakharyaschev

ACL:
Ivan Zakharyaschev
@everybody

    1. make
    2. tmpdir.sh
    3. rpm
    4. rpm-build
    5. rpm-build-licenses

Last changed


June 30, 2020 Ivan Zakharyaschev 1.1.3-alt5
- Also test the compatibility between `uname -m`, rpmbuild, and rpm -i.
  (A separate archcompat-checkinstall subpkg does this.)
- First, run a simple test (to fail fast).
June 4, 2019 Ivan Zakharyaschev 1.1.3-alt4
- To catch more errors:
  + in upgradable.mk strictly_newer_* helpers, separated the xfail reasons:
    a special reason for xfailing just the asymmetry test
    (i.e., a pair of pkgs non-upgradable in bad direction),
    and another one for xfailing just the upgrade test
    (i.e., the same pair of pkgs upgradable in good direction).
  (Now, the tests failing for one of the two reasons which is not marked as xfail
  will just fail rather than xfail. Previously, we couldn't distinguish them
  and could overlook a real unexpected failure.)
April 26, 2019 Ivan Zakharyaschev 1.1.3-alt3
- To catch more errors (evidenced by file conflicts during rpm -U),
  now the package template includes a file with a unique value.
  (This runs more slowly.) (Suggested by Vladimir Seleznev.)