Bug 458367

Summary: Review Request: ocaml-ocamlgraph - OCaml library for arc and node graphs
Product: [Fedora] Fedora Reporter: Alan Dunn <amdunn>
Component: Package ReviewAssignee: David A. Wheeler <dwheeler>
Status: CLOSED NEXTRELEASE QA Contact: Fedora Extras Quality Assurance <extras-qa>
Severity: medium Docs Contact:
Priority: medium    
Version: rawhideCC: a.badger, dwheeler, fedora-package-review, notting
Target Milestone: ---Flags: dwheeler: fedora-review+
a.badger: fedora-cvs+
Target Release: ---   
Hardware: All   
OS: Linux   
Whiteboard:
Fixed In Version: Doc Type: Bug Fix
Doc Text:
Story Points: ---
Clone Of: Environment:
Last Closed: 2008-09-10 06:42:00 UTC Type: ---
Regression: --- Mount Type: ---
Documentation: --- CRM:
Verified Versions: Category: ---
oVirt Team: --- RHEL 7.3 requirements from Atomic Host:
Cloudforms Team: --- Target Upstream Version:
Embargoed:

Description Alan Dunn 2008-08-07 19:38:58 UTC
Spec URL: http://www.duke.edu/~amd34/ocamlgraph/ocaml-ocamlgraph.spec
SRPM URL: http://www.duke.edu/~amd34/ocamlgraph/ocaml-ocamlgraph-0.99c-1.fc9.src.rpm
Description: Ocamlgraph provides several different implementations of graph data
structures. It also provides implementations for a number of classical
graph algorithms like Kruskal's algorithm for MSTs, topological
ordering of DAGs, Dijkstra's shortest paths algorithm, and
Ford-Fulkerson's maximal-flow algorithm to name a few. The algorithms
and data structures are written functorially for maximal
reusability. Also has input and output capability for Graph Modeling
Language file format and Dot and Neato graphviz (graph visualization)
tools.

Comment 1 David A. Wheeler 2008-08-07 21:38:22 UTC
ocaml-ocamlgraph.i386: E: no-binary

Comment 2 David A. Wheeler 2008-08-07 21:50:34 UTC
Okay, I'll pick this one up.  Here are a few quick comments:

rpmlint produces an error which you've not justified.  When I run:
[dwheeler@dwheeler2-pc SPECS]$ rpmlint ocaml-ocamlgraph.spec ../SRPMS/ocaml-ocamlgraph-0.99c-1.fc9.src.rpm ../RPMS/i386/ocaml-ocamlgraph-*
ocaml-ocamlgraph.i386: E: no-binary
3 packages and 1 specfiles checked; 1 errors, 0 warnings.

$ rpmls ../RPMS/i386/ocaml-ocamlgraph-0.99c-1.fc9.i386.rpm
drwxr-xr-x  /usr/lib/ocaml/ocamlgraph
-rw-r--r--  /usr/lib/ocaml/ocamlgraph/META
-rw-r--r--  /usr/lib/ocaml/ocamlgraph/graph.cma
-rw-r--r--  /usr/lib/ocaml/ocamlgraph/graph.cmi
-rw-r--r--  /usr/share/doc/ocaml-ocamlgraph-0.99c/LICENSE

These aren't really architecture-dependent files, correct?
Since .cma is bytecode, and .cmi is a compilation signature, these
are NOT architecture-dependent, and they should be in /usr/share/WHATEVER...
correct?  Let me know if I'm wrong about this, but I think
rpmlint gets this one right, these AREN'T architecture-dependent,
and so the FHS says that they belong in /usr/share and not /usr/lib.
(Yes, this is an FHS rule that's frequently violated.)

I'm very glad to see a "%check" section.  But I think you should NOT do:
 cp %{SOURCE1} .
during %check; I think you should do that during %build.  I would expect the result of "%build" to be that "all the files are ready for checking and installing", and that's not really the case here.  If I built, and did some hand-testing, the 'expected output' file isn't in the BUILD directory yet in the current approach.  It's also odd that a SOURCE file is NOT used in the %build phase, but only afterwards.

Comment 3 Alan Dunn 2008-08-07 21:56:44 UTC
(In reply to comment #2)
> Okay, I'll pick this one up.  Here are a few quick comments:
> 
> rpmlint produces an error which you've not justified.  When I run:
> [dwheeler@dwheeler2-pc SPECS]$ rpmlint ocaml-ocamlgraph.spec
> ../SRPMS/ocaml-ocamlgraph-0.99c-1.fc9.src.rpm ../RPMS/i386/ocaml-ocamlgraph-*
> ocaml-ocamlgraph.i386: E: no-binary
> 3 packages and 1 specfiles checked; 1 errors, 0 warnings.
>
> $ rpmls ../RPMS/i386/ocaml-ocamlgraph-0.99c-1.fc9.i386.rpm
> drwxr-xr-x  /usr/lib/ocaml/ocamlgraph
> -rw-r--r--  /usr/lib/ocaml/ocamlgraph/META
> -rw-r--r--  /usr/lib/ocaml/ocamlgraph/graph.cma
> -rw-r--r--  /usr/lib/ocaml/ocamlgraph/graph.cmi
> -rw-r--r--  /usr/share/doc/ocaml-ocamlgraph-0.99c/LICENSE
> 
> These aren't really architecture-dependent files, correct?
> Since .cma is bytecode, and .cmi is a compilation signature, these
> are NOT architecture-dependent, and they should be in /usr/share/WHATEVER...
> correct?  Let me know if I'm wrong about this, but I think
> rpmlint gets this one right, these AREN'T architecture-dependent,
> and so the FHS says that they belong in /usr/share and not /usr/lib.
> (Yes, this is an FHS rule that's frequently violated.)

(In reply to comment #1)
> ocaml-ocamlgraph.i386: E: no-binary

You just reminded me of the thing I forgot to enter into the original
description:

I'm aware of this, however, may actually not be considered an error. It is
currently standard practice with OCaml library packages to keep them as
architecture dependent packages due to the limitations of the RPM format as per
the following discussion:

https://www.redhat.com/archives/fedora-packaging/2008-August/msg00017.html

A potential fix is suggested in

https://www.redhat.com/archives/fedora-packaging/2008-August/msg00020.html

However, this is currently not what has been done for previous packages. The
question becomes whether now is the time to deviate from prior practice.
 
> I'm very glad to see a "%check" section.  But I think you should NOT do:
>  cp %{SOURCE1} .
> during %check; I think you should do that during %build.  I would expect the
> result of "%build" to be that "all the files are ready for checking and
> installing", and that's not really the case here.  If I built, and did some
> hand-testing, the 'expected output' file isn't in the BUILD directory yet in
> the current approach.  It's also odd that a SOURCE file is NOT used in the
> %build phase, but only afterwards.

Okay, I'll change that.

Comment 4 David A. Wheeler 2008-08-08 02:33:42 UTC
Responding to comment #3:
> I'm aware of this, however, may actually not be considered an error.

Okay, I see the problem.  If it's better to make rpmlint whine, at least document in the .spec file that the rpmlint complaint is expected, and why. Perhaps include the URL you just quoted?

Comment 5 Jason Tibbitts 2008-08-09 14:30:45 UTC
Please remember to set the review flag to '?' when you're reviewing a package.

Comment 6 David A. Wheeler 2008-08-13 15:21:30 UTC
See my previous comments for just "looking at the spec file overall".

Below is my review.  The big issue is that the license is wrong, it's the _LGPLv2_ not the _GPLv2_.  It's actually the LGPLv2 + an additional permission; see below on how I think you should handle that.


Using http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Packaging/ReviewGuidelines :

- MUST: rpmlint must be run on every package. The output should be posted in the review.
FAIL.  As noted above, there's an rpmlint complaint not justified in the .spec file.  Justify or fix.

- MUST: The package must be named according to the Package Naming Guidelines
OK

- MUST: The spec file name must match the base package %{name}, in the format %{name}.spec unless your package has an exemption on Package Naming Guidelines
OK

- MUST: The package must meet the Packaging Guidelines
OK (other than what I've noted elsewhere)

- MUST: The package must be licensed with a Fedora approved license and meet the Licensing Guidelines
OK (claimed GPLv2, actually LGPLv2, see beow)

- MUST: The License field in the package spec file must match the actual license.
FAIL.  It's actually the LGPLv2, not the GPLv2.  See LICENSE.

In _addition_, it's not really the stock LGPLv2 license.  It's the LGPLv2, _plus_ an additional permission granting additional privileges
(it looks a LOT like the GNAT additional privileges):
"As a special exception to the GNU Library General Public License, you
may link, statically or dynamically, a "work that uses the Library"
with a publicly distributed version of the Library to produce an
executable file containing portions of the Library, and distribute
that executable file under terms of your choice, without any of the
additional requirements listed in clause 6 of the GNU Library General
Public License. By "a publicly distributed version of the Library", we
mean either the unmodified Library as distributed, or a
modified version of the Library that is distributed under the
conditions defined in clause 3 of the GNU Library General Public
License. This exception does not however invalidate any other reasons
why the executable file might be covered by the GNU Library General
Public License."

The LGPLv2 is a free software and open source software license.
Since adding _additional_ permissions cannot remove that status, this
license is as well.  So here's what I suggest:

1. Use "LGPLv2 with exceptions" as the license, per http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Licensing  In this case, it's not really an "exception", it's an "additional privilege", but there's no standard way to denote that; "with exceptions" is the best we can do.
2. Don't bother reporting to fedora-legal-list at redhat.com.  Since the license only adds additional privileges it cannot possibly NOT be a FLOSS license.

- MUST: If (and only if) the source package includes the text of the license(s) in its own file, then that file, containing the text of the license(s) for the package must be included in %doc.
OK, /usr/share/doc/ocaml-ocamlgraph-0.99c/LICENSE

- MUST: The spec file must be written in American English.
OK

- MUST: The spec file for the package MUST be legible. If the reviewer is unable to read the spec file, it will be impossible to perform a review. Fedora is not the place for entries into the Obfuscated Code Contest (http://www.ioccc.org/).
OK

- MUST: The sources used to build the package must match the upstream source, as provided in the spec URL. Reviewers should use md5sum for this task. If no upstream URL can be specified for this package, please see the Source URL Guidelines for how to deal with this.
OK.
3aff22a06afaa105ca40e31a5e15cf21  ocamlgraph-0.99c.tar.gz
3aff22a06afaa105ca40e31a5e15cf21  ../SOURCES/ocamlgraph-0.99c.tar.gz

- MUST: The package must successfully compile and build into binary rpms on at least one supported architecture.
OK

- MUST: If the package does not successfully compile, build or work on an architecture, then those architectures should be listed in the spec in ExcludeArch. Each architecture listed in ExcludeArch needs to have a bug filed in bugzilla, describing the reason that the package does not compile/build/work on that architecture. The bug number should then be placed in a comment, next to the corresponding ExcludeArch line. New packages will not have bugzilla entries during the review process, so they should put this description in the comment until the package is approved, then file the bugzilla entry, and replace the long explanation with the bug number. The bug should be marked as blocking one (or more) of the following bugs to simplify tracking such issues: FE-ExcludeArch-x86 , FE-ExcludeArch-x64 , FE-ExcludeArch-ppc , FE-ExcludeArch-ppc64
N/A.
Tested with koji build --scratch dist-f9 ../SRPMS/ocaml-ocamlgraph-0.99c-1.fc9.src.rpm

- MUST: All build dependencies must be listed in BuildRequires, except for any that are listed in the exceptions section of the Packaging Guidelines ; inclusion of those as BuildRequires is optional. Apply common sense.
OK.
Tested with koji build --scratch dist-f9 ../SRPMS/ocaml-ocamlgraph-0.99c-1.fc9.src.rpm


- MUST: The spec file MUST handle locales properly. This is done by using the %find_lang macro. Using %{_datadir}/locale/* is strictly forbidden.
N/A

- MUST: Every binary RPM package which stores shared library files (not just symlinks) in any of the dynamic linker's default paths, must call ldconfig in %post and %postun. If the package has multiple subpackages with libraries, each subpackage should also have a %post/%postun section that calls /sbin/ldconfig.
N/A; see OCaml guidelines for more about OCaml libraries.

- MUST: If the package is designed to be relocatable, the packager must state this fact in the request for review, along with the rationalization for relocation of that specific package. Without this, use of Prefix: /usr is considered a blocker.
N/A.

- MUST: A package must own all directories that it creates. If it does not create a directory that it uses, then it should require a package which does create that directory. Refer to the Guidelines for examples.
OK.  Checked rpmls and .spec file itself, looks good.

- MUST: A package must not contain any duplicate files in the %files listing.
OK.

- MUST: Permissions on files must be set properly. Executables should be set with executable permissions, for example. Every %files section must include a %defattr(...) line.
OK

- MUST: Each package must have a %clean section, which contains rm -rf %{buildroot} ( or $RPM_BUILD_ROOT ).
OK

- MUST: Each package must consistently use macros, as described in the macros section of Packaging Guidelines
OK

- MUST: The package must contain code, or permissable content. This is described in detail in the code vs. content section of Packaging Guidelines
OK

- MUST: Large documentation files should go in a -doc subpackage. (The definition of large is left up to the packager's best judgement, but is not restricted to size. Large can refer to either size or quantity)
N/A

- MUST: If a package includes something as %doc, it must not affect the runtime of the application. To summarize: If it is in %doc, the program must run properly if it is not present.
OK

- MUST: Header files must be in a -devel package.
N/A

- MUST: Static libraries must be in a -static package.
N/A

- MUST: Packages containing pkgconfig(.pc) files must 'Requires: pkgconfig' (for directory ownership and usability).
N/A

- MUST: If a package contains library files with a suffix (e.g. libfoo.so.1.1), then library files that end in .so (without suffix) must go in a -devel package.
N/A

- MUST: In the vast majority of cases, devel packages must require the base package using a fully versioned dependency: Requires: %{name} = %{version}-%{release}
N/A

- MUST: Packages must NOT contain any .la libtool archives, these should be removed in the spec.
N/A

- MUST: Packages containing GUI applications must include a %{name}.desktop file, and that file must be properly installed with desktop-file-install in the %install section. This is described in detail in the desktop files section of the Packaging Guidelines . If you feel that your packaged GUI application does not need a .desktop file, you must put a comment in the spec file with your explanation.
N/A

- MUST: Packages must not own files or directories already owned by other packages. The rule of thumb here is that the first package to be installed should own the files or directories that other packages may rely upon. This means, for example, that no package in Fedora should ever share ownership with any of the files or directories owned by the filesystem or man package. If you feel that you have a good reason to own a file or directory that another package owns, then please present that at package review time.
OK

- MUST: At the beginning of %install, each package MUST run rm -rf %{buildroot} ( or $RPM_BUILD_ROOT ). See Prepping BuildRoot For %install for details.
OK

- MUST: All filenames in rpm packages must be valid UTF-8.
OK

SHOULD Items:

- SHOULD: If the source package does not include license text(s) as a separate file from upstream, the packager SHOULD query upstream to include it.
N/A

- SHOULD: The description and summary sections in the package spec file should contain translations for supported Non-English languages, if available.
N/A. Doesn't have any translations, but I don't see evidence of translations easily available.

- SHOULD: The reviewer should test that the package builds in mock. See MockTricks for details on how to do this.
OK.  Builds in koji, thus builds in Mock.

- SHOULD: The package should compile and build into binary rpms on all supported architectures.
OK. (Tested with Koji, above)

- SHOULD: The reviewer should test that the package functions as described. A package should not segfault instead of running, for example.
OK. It has a %check section, which does that.

- SHOULD: If scriptlets are used, those scriptlets must be sane. This is vague, and left up to the reviewers judgement to determine sanity.
N/A

- SHOULD: Usually, subpackages other than devel should require the base package using a fully versioned dependency.
N/A

- SHOULD: The placement of pkgconfig(.pc) files depends on their usecase, and this is usually for development purposes, so should be placed in a -devel pkg. A reasonable exception is that the main pkg itself is a devel tool not installed in a user runtime, e.g. gcc or gdb.
N/A

- SHOULD: If the package has file dependencies outside of /etc, /bin, /sbin, /usr/bin, or /usr/sbin consider requiring the package which provides the file instead of the file itself. Please see File Dependencies in the Guidelines for further information.
N/A

Comment 7 David A. Wheeler 2008-08-13 15:36:07 UTC
By the way, this "linking exception" style text is so common
that there's a Wikipedia entry on it (for GPL not LGPL, but same issue):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GPL_linking_exception

Comment 8 Alan Dunn 2008-08-13 18:03:33 UTC
Your changes have been made in 

http://www.duke.edu/~amd34/ocamlgraph/ocaml-ocamlgraph.spec
http://www.duke.edu/~amd34/ocamlgraph/ocaml-ocamlgraph-0.99c-2.fc9.src.rpm

(I was waiting to make the former change until I got a list like this.)

(In reply to comment #6)
> See my previous comments for just "looking at the spec file overall".
> Below is my review.  The big issue is that the license is wrong, it's the
> _LGPLv2_ not the _GPLv2_.  It's actually the LGPLv2 + an additional permission;
> see below on how I think you should handle that.
> Using http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Packaging/ReviewGuidelines :
> - MUST: rpmlint must be run on every package. The output should be posted in
> the review.
> FAIL.  As noted above, there's an rpmlint complaint not justified in the .spec
> file.  Justify or fix.
> - MUST: The package must be named according to the Package Naming Guidelines
> OK
> - MUST: The spec file name must match the base package %{name}, in the format
> %{name}.spec unless your package has an exemption on Package Naming Guidelines
> OK
> - MUST: The package must meet the Packaging Guidelines
> OK (other than what I've noted elsewhere)
> - MUST: The package must be licensed with a Fedora approved license and meet
> the Licensing Guidelines
> OK (claimed GPLv2, actually LGPLv2, see beow)
> - MUST: The License field in the package spec file must match the actual
> license.
> FAIL.  It's actually the LGPLv2, not the GPLv2.  See LICENSE.
> In _addition_, it's not really the stock LGPLv2 license.  It's the LGPLv2,
> _plus_ an additional permission granting additional privileges
> (it looks a LOT like the GNAT additional privileges):
> "As a special exception to the GNU Library General Public License, you
> may link, statically or dynamically, a "work that uses the Library"
> with a publicly distributed version of the Library to produce an
> executable file containing portions of the Library, and distribute
> that executable file under terms of your choice, without any of the
> additional requirements listed in clause 6 of the GNU Library General
> Public License. By "a publicly distributed version of the Library", we
> mean either the unmodified Library as distributed, or a
> modified version of the Library that is distributed under the
> conditions defined in clause 3 of the GNU Library General Public
> License. This exception does not however invalidate any other reasons
> why the executable file might be covered by the GNU Library General
> Public License."
> The LGPLv2 is a free software and open source software license.
> Since adding _additional_ permissions cannot remove that status, this
> license is as well.  So here's what I suggest:
> 1. Use "LGPLv2 with exceptions" as the license, per
> http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Licensing  In this case, it's not really an
> "exception", it's an "additional privilege", but there's no standard way to
> denote that; "with exceptions" is the best we can do.
> 2. Don't bother reporting to fedora-legal-list at redhat.com.  Since the
> license only adds additional privileges it cannot possibly NOT be a FLOSS
> license.
> - MUST: If (and only if) the source package includes the text of the license(s)
> in its own file, then that file, containing the text of the license(s) for the
> package must be included in %doc.
> OK, /usr/share/doc/ocaml-ocamlgraph-0.99c/LICENSE
> - MUST: The spec file must be written in American English.
> OK
> - MUST: The spec file for the package MUST be legible. If the reviewer is
> unable to read the spec file, it will be impossible to perform a review. Fedora
> is not the place for entries into the Obfuscated Code Contest
> (http://www.ioccc.org/).
> OK
> - MUST: The sources used to build the package must match the upstream source,
> as provided in the spec URL. Reviewers should use md5sum for this task. If no
> upstream URL can be specified for this package, please see the Source URL
> Guidelines for how to deal with this.
> OK.
> 3aff22a06afaa105ca40e31a5e15cf21  ocamlgraph-0.99c.tar.gz
> 3aff22a06afaa105ca40e31a5e15cf21  ../SOURCES/ocamlgraph-0.99c.tar.gz
> - MUST: The package must successfully compile and build into binary rpms on at
> least one supported architecture.
> OK
> - MUST: If the package does not successfully compile, build or work on an
> architecture, then those architectures should be listed in the spec in
> ExcludeArch. Each architecture listed in ExcludeArch needs to have a bug filed
> in bugzilla, describing the reason that the package does not compile/build/work
> on that architecture. The bug number should then be placed in a comment, next
> to the corresponding ExcludeArch line. New packages will not have bugzilla
> entries during the review process, so they should put this description in the
> comment until the package is approved, then file the bugzilla entry, and
> replace the long explanation with the bug number. The bug should be marked as
> blocking one (or more) of the following bugs to simplify tracking such issues:
> FE-ExcludeArch-x86 , FE-ExcludeArch-x64 , FE-ExcludeArch-ppc ,
> FE-ExcludeArch-ppc64
> N/A.
> Tested with koji build --scratch dist-f9
> ../SRPMS/ocaml-ocamlgraph-0.99c-1.fc9.src.rpm
> - MUST: All build dependencies must be listed in BuildRequires, except for any
> that are listed in the exceptions section of the Packaging Guidelines ;
> inclusion of those as BuildRequires is optional. Apply common sense.
> OK.
> Tested with koji build --scratch dist-f9
> ../SRPMS/ocaml-ocamlgraph-0.99c-1.fc9.src.rpm
> - MUST: The spec file MUST handle locales properly. This is done by using the
> %find_lang macro. Using %{_datadir}/locale/* is strictly forbidden.
> N/A
> - MUST: Every binary RPM package which stores shared library files (not just
> symlinks) in any of the dynamic linker's default paths, must call ldconfig in
> %post and %postun. If the package has multiple subpackages with libraries, each
> subpackage should also have a %post/%postun section that calls /sbin/ldconfig.
> N/A; see OCaml guidelines for more about OCaml libraries.
> - MUST: If the package is designed to be relocatable, the packager must state
> this fact in the request for review, along with the rationalization for
> relocation of that specific package. Without this, use of Prefix: /usr is
> considered a blocker.
> N/A.
> - MUST: A package must own all directories that it creates. If it does not
> create a directory that it uses, then it should require a package which does
> create that directory. Refer to the Guidelines for examples.
> OK.  Checked rpmls and .spec file itself, looks good.
> - MUST: A package must not contain any duplicate files in the %files listing.
> OK.
> - MUST: Permissions on files must be set properly. Executables should be set
> with executable permissions, for example. Every %files section must include a
> %defattr(...) line.
> OK
> - MUST: Each package must have a %clean section, which contains rm -rf
> %{buildroot} ( or $RPM_BUILD_ROOT ).
> OK
> - MUST: Each package must consistently use macros, as described in the macros
> section of Packaging Guidelines
> OK
> - MUST: The package must contain code, or permissable content. This is
> described in detail in the code vs. content section of Packaging Guidelines
> OK
> - MUST: Large documentation files should go in a -doc subpackage. (The
> definition of large is left up to the packager's best judgement, but is not
> restricted to size. Large can refer to either size or quantity)
> N/A
> - MUST: If a package includes something as %doc, it must not affect the runtime
> of the application. To summarize: If it is in %doc, the program must run
> properly if it is not present.
> OK
> - MUST: Header files must be in a -devel package.
> N/A
> - MUST: Static libraries must be in a -static package.
> N/A
> - MUST: Packages containing pkgconfig(.pc) files must 'Requires: pkgconfig'
> (for directory ownership and usability).
> N/A
> - MUST: If a package contains library files with a suffix (e.g. libfoo.so.1.1),
> then library files that end in .so (without suffix) must go in a -devel
> package.
> N/A
> - MUST: In the vast majority of cases, devel packages must require the base
> package using a fully versioned dependency: Requires: %{name} =
> %{version}-%{release}
> N/A
> - MUST: Packages must NOT contain any .la libtool archives, these should be
> removed in the spec.
> N/A
> - MUST: Packages containing GUI applications must include a %{name}.desktop
> file, and that file must be properly installed with desktop-file-install in the
> %install section. This is described in detail in the desktop files section of
> the Packaging Guidelines . If you feel that your packaged GUI application does
> not need a .desktop file, you must put a comment in the spec file with your
> explanation.
> N/A
> - MUST: Packages must not own files or directories already owned by other
> packages. The rule of thumb here is that the first package to be installed
> should own the files or directories that other packages may rely upon. This
> means, for example, that no package in Fedora should ever share ownership with
> any of the files or directories owned by the filesystem or man package. If you
> feel that you have a good reason to own a file or directory that another
> package owns, then please present that at package review time.
> OK
> - MUST: At the beginning of %install, each package MUST run rm -rf %{buildroot}
> ( or $RPM_BUILD_ROOT ). See Prepping BuildRoot For %install for details.
> OK
> - MUST: All filenames in rpm packages must be valid UTF-8.
> OK
> SHOULD Items:
> - SHOULD: If the source package does not include license text(s) as a separate
> file from upstream, the packager SHOULD query upstream to include it.
> N/A
> - SHOULD: The description and summary sections in the package spec file should
> contain translations for supported Non-English languages, if available.
> N/A. Doesn't have any translations, but I don't see evidence of translations
> easily available.
> - SHOULD: The reviewer should test that the package builds in mock. See
> MockTricks for details on how to do this.
> OK.  Builds in koji, thus builds in Mock.
> - SHOULD: The package should compile and build into binary rpms on all
> supported architectures.
> OK. (Tested with Koji, above)
> - SHOULD: The reviewer should test that the package functions as described. A
> package should not segfault instead of running, for example.
> OK. It has a %check section, which does that.
> - SHOULD: If scriptlets are used, those scriptlets must be sane. This is vague,
> and left up to the reviewers judgement to determine sanity.
> N/A
> - SHOULD: Usually, subpackages other than devel should require the base package
> using a fully versioned dependency.
> N/A
> - SHOULD: The placement of pkgconfig(.pc) files depends on their usecase, and
> this is usually for development purposes, so should be placed in a -devel pkg.
> A reasonable exception is that the main pkg itself is a devel tool not
> installed in a user runtime, e.g. gcc or gdb.
> N/A
> - SHOULD: If the package has file dependencies outside of /etc, /bin, /sbin,
> /usr/bin, or /usr/sbin consider requiring the package which provides the file
> instead of the file itself. Please see File Dependencies in the Guidelines for
> further information.
> N/A

Comment 9 David A. Wheeler 2008-08-14 00:36:51 UTC
Very good, all the problems have been addressed. Builds fine.  Congrats.

APPROVED.

Comment 10 Alan Dunn 2008-08-14 01:01:21 UTC
New Package CVS Request
=======================
Package Name: ocaml-ocamlgraph
Short Description: OCaml library for arc and node graphs
Owners: amdunn
Branches: F-8 F-9
InitialCC:
Packager Commits: yes

Comment 11 Toshio Ernie Kuratomi 2008-08-23 03:42:10 UTC
cvs done.

Comment 12 Fedora Update System 2008-08-23 23:41:03 UTC
ocaml-ocamlgraph-0.99c-2.fc9 has been submitted as an update for Fedora 9.
http://admin.fedoraproject.org/updates/ocaml-ocamlgraph-0.99c-2.fc9

Comment 13 Fedora Update System 2008-09-10 06:41:55 UTC
ocaml-ocamlgraph-0.99c-2.fc9 has been pushed to the Fedora 9 stable repository.  If problems still persist, please make note of it in this bug report.