Summary: | phpmyadmin ebuild should depend on webapp-config | ||
---|---|---|---|
Product: | Gentoo Linux | Reporter: | Mark D. <exien.ow> |
Component: | New packages | Assignee: | Gentoo Linux bug wranglers <bug-wranglers> |
Status: | RESOLVED INVALID | ||
Severity: | normal | CC: | hackerangelm |
Priority: | High | ||
Version: | unspecified | ||
Hardware: | All | ||
OS: | Linux | ||
Whiteboard: | |||
Package list: | Runtime testing required: | --- |
Description
Mark D.
2008-07-04 06:13:46 UTC
Sorry, it's a problem with upgrading to python 2.5 without rebuilding my python modules. please be more specific. Packages rebuild? You could command line measurements to use. (In reply to comment #0) > When I try to install phpmyadmin-2.11.7 without the webapp-config package > installed, I get this nasty error message: > > * checking auxfile checksums ;-) ... > [ ok ] > * checking miscfile checksums ;-) ... > [ ok ] > * checking phpMyAdmin-2.11.7-all-languages-utf-8-only.tar.bz2 ;-) ... > [ ok ] > Traceback (most recent call last): > File "/usr/sbin/webapp-config", line 27, in <module> > from WebappConfig.config import Config > ImportError: No module named WebappConfig.config > * > * ERROR: dev-db/phpmyadmin-2.11.7 failed. > * Call stack: > * ebuild.sh, line 49: Called pkg_setup > * phpmyadmin-2.11.7.ebuild, line 24: Called webapp_pkg_setup > * webapp.eclass, line 378: Called webapp_read_config > * webapp.eclass, line 60: Called die > * The specific snippet of code: > * ENVVAR=$(${WEBAPP_CONFIG} --query ${PN} ${PVR}) || die "Could > not read settings from webapp-config!" > * The die message: > * Could not read settings from webapp-config! > > > I would expect the phpmyadmin emerge to pull in webapp-config as a > pre-requisite, so everything just works! > > Reproducible: Always > > Steps to Reproduce: > (In reply to comment #1) > Sorry, it's a problem with upgrading to python 2.5 without rebuilding my python > modules. > (In reply to comment #1) > Sorry, it's a problem with upgrading to python 2.5 without rebuilding my python > modules. > Use the python-updater command line tool to fix python, after it's been updated. (Mark Deepwell) Your solution for this bug is correct: # python-updater |