<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes" ?>
<!DOCTYPE bugzilla SYSTEM "http://bugs.gentoo.org/bugzilla.dtd">

<bugzilla version="2.22.7"
          urlbase="http://bugs.gentoo.org/"
          maintainer="bugzilla@gentoo.org"
>

    <bug>
          <bug_id>188535</bug_id>
          
          <creation_ts>2007-08-12 05:34 0000</creation_ts>
          <short_desc>gnome-extra/gnome-media-2.18.0 ebuild missing dependency for gnome-cd</short_desc>
          <delta_ts>2008-05-14 21:39:25 0000</delta_ts>
          <reporter_accessible>1</reporter_accessible>
          <cclist_accessible>1</cclist_accessible>
          <classification_id>1</classification_id>
          <classification>Unclassified</classification>
          <product>Gentoo Linux</product>
          <component>GNOME</component>
          <version>unspecified</version>
          <rep_platform>All</rep_platform>
          <op_sys>Linux</op_sys>
          <bug_status>RESOLVED</bug_status>
          <resolution>FIXED</resolution>
          
          
          
          <priority>P2</priority>
          <bug_severity>normal</bug_severity>
          <target_milestone>---</target_milestone>
          
          
          
          <everconfirmed>1</everconfirmed>
          <reporter>leftmostcat@gmail.com</reporter>
          <assigned_to>gnome@gentoo.org</assigned_to>
          

      

      
          <long_desc isprivate="0">
            <who>leftmostcat@gmail.com</who>
            <bug_when>2007-08-12 05:34:35 0000</bug_when>
            <thetext>By default, the gnome-cd application included with gnome-extra/gnome-media-2.18.0 is unable to play CDs. When started, it gives the error `No URI handler implemented for &quot;cdda&quot;&apos;. Installing media-plugins/gst-plugins-cdio, currently without a package marked stable, solves this problem.

Reproducible: Always

Steps to Reproduce:
1. Without gst-plugins-cdio installed, install gnome-media 2.18.0.
2. Insert a CD and open `gnome-cd&apos; from the command line.

Actual Results:  
gnome-cd spits out an error and claims it cannot find the disc.

Expected Results:  
gnome-cd should recognize the disc and allow the user to play it.</thetext>
          </long_desc>
          <long_desc isprivate="0">
            <who>leio@gentoo.org</who>
            <bug_when>2007-08-29 07:45:40 0000</bug_when>
            <thetext>We can&apos;t depend on it until it doesn&apos;t have a stable version, or we&apos;ll be stuck in ~arch for gnome-media till then.
Gstreamer plugins are supposed to be dynamic like that - ideally instead of depending on any of them, you would be told what package you need to emerge to enable a functionality you try to use - like libgimmecodec in Ubuntu, I think.
There are plans for such a gstreamer hook for Gentoo, similar to what Ubuntu and now also Fedora has, but no-one has taken the time to implement this yet. Just a version that tells what package to emerge in the command line would be a good start.</thetext>
          </long_desc>
          <long_desc isprivate="0">
            <who>eva@gentoo.org</who>
            <bug_when>2008-05-01 10:47:32 0000</bug_when>
            <thetext>@reporter, does it also work with gst-plugins-cdparanoia ? (you&apos;ll have to temporarily remove gst-plugins-cdio to test that, use quickpkg and emerge -k to restore).</thetext>
          </long_desc>
          <long_desc isprivate="0">
            <who>eva@gentoo.org</who>
            <bug_when>2008-05-14 21:39:25 0000</bug_when>
            <thetext>ok did the tests myself in the end, it appears to work with both gst-plugins-cdio and gst-plugins-cdparanoia. Added the deps, closing.</thetext>
          </long_desc>
      
    </bug>

</bugzilla>