How can I make an RPM depend on package a OR package b?
Asked Answered
R

3

10

This seems like a simple question, but the docs don't seem to have anything to say on the subject. I would like to do something like Requires: vim or emacs but when I do that, I in fact depend on vim, or and emacs. What is the syntax for depending on one or another of two packages?

Richert answered 26/1, 2010 at 13:30 Comment(0)
P
19

The standard way to do this is via virtual provides: the providing RPMs each state that they provide a virtual package, and the dependent RPM requires that virtual package. So, in your example, vim and emacs both Provides: text-editor, and your package would Requires: text-editor.

If the packages that you're depending on don't provide an appropriate virtual package, you could probably hack around this by making up your own. Make dummy my-package-vim-mode and my-package-emacs-mode RPMs that Requires: vim and Requires: emacs, respectively, and Provides: my-package-text-editor, then have your package Requires: my-package-text-editor.

Platform answered 26/1, 2010 at 13:41 Comment(0)
J
8

If packages don't have common Provide, and you don't want to rebuild and maintain forks of that packages, but they both do provide same file, you can depend on a file. For example:

Requires: /usr/bin/pear

That way your package won't matter if pear binary is provided by php-pear or php53-pear.

Julissa answered 10/8, 2012 at 14:29 Comment(0)
E
2

There is no such capability in rpm. Require a virtual provides that the packages have in common, if there is one.

Electrothermics answered 26/1, 2010 at 13:38 Comment(0)

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