dnf complains dependency issue for the following packages: NetworkManager-sstp sstp-client NetworkManager-sstp-gnome Please fix if possible. *rawhide*
I rebuilt it against the current ppp (in master and f27 branches): https://koji.fedoraproject.org/koji/buildinfo?buildID=951412 Btw, is there an easy way to check it without waiting for the next "Broken dependencies" report (or switching local installation to rawhide)?
(In reply to Marcin Zajaczkowski from comment #1) > Btw, is there an easy way to check it without waiting for the next "Broken > dependencies" report (or switching local installation to rawhide)? Run this once a while whithout switching installation to rawhide or breaking current installation: sudo dnf group install "Xfce Desktop" --releasever=rawhide --disablerepo=* --enablerepo=*rawhide* --installroot=/tmp/rawhide --assumeno What it does is this: sudo dnf group install "Xfce Desktop" should be clear! It tries installing said group and resolves dependencies for said releasever! --releasever=rawhide switches dnf to grab the rawhide packages --disablerepo=* disable all other repositories you may have.. also copr --enablerepo=*fedora* excplicitly enables *rawhide* (pay attention to the asterix) --installroot=/tmp/rawhide will download all metapackages, packagelists, cache and so on in /tmp/rawhide (to prevent polluting your cache in /var). You can delete that directoy again once the dnf process is finished... or simply wait for reboot to have it nuked. --assumeno ... tells dnf to not download anything... just resolve, check, inform and exit.
Thanks for detailed explanation Ali! The problem is still reported on my machine, but the old sstp-client version is used. I will wait a while to make it available in the rawhide repo. Btw, how long can it take to make a package from Koji available in the rawhide repo?
Btw2, in the same time I've got an email: > NetworkManager-sstp's builds are back to normal in Fedora rawhide > https://apps.fedoraproject.org/koschei/package/NetworkManager-sstp?collection=f27
Seems to be indeed fixed (tested with trying with the aforementioned dnf command). Closing.