From: Scott Barninger Date: Sat, 28 Jun 2008 14:18:17 +0000 (+0000) Subject: Add SuSE-11.0 X-Git-Tag: Release-3.0.0~1214 X-Git-Url: https://git.sur5r.net/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=a709a45ffcb73ac264215033afe46275f09d5af9;p=bacula%2Fdocs Add SuSE-11.0 --- diff --git a/docs/manuals/en/utility/rpm-faq.tex b/docs/manuals/en/utility/rpm-faq.tex index 9f4eef6e..76bcfe6e 100644 --- a/docs/manuals/en/utility/rpm-faq.tex +++ b/docs/manuals/en/utility/rpm-faq.tex @@ -43,7 +43,7 @@ Red Hat 7.x (rh7), Red Hat 8.0 (rh8), Red Hat 9 (rh9), Fedora Core (fc1, fc3, fc4, fc5, fc6, fc7, fc8), Whitebox Enterprise Linux 3.0 (wb3), Red Hat Enterprise Linux (rhel3, rhel4, rhel5), Mandrake 10.x (mdk), Mandriva 2006.x (mdv) CentOS (centos3, centos4, centos5) - Scientific Linux (sl3, sl4, sl5) and SuSE (su9, su10, su102, su103). The package build is controlled by a mandatory define set at the beginning of the file. These defines basically just control the dependency information that gets coded into the finished rpm package as well + Scientific Linux (sl3, sl4, sl5) and SuSE (su9, su10, su102, su103, su110). The package build is controlled by a mandatory define set at the beginning of the file. These defines basically just control the dependency information that gets coded into the finished rpm package as well as any special configure options required. The platform define may be edited in the spec file directly (by default all defines are set to 0 or "not set"). For example, to build the Red Hat 7.x package find the line in the spec file @@ -315,6 +315,7 @@ SuSE build --define "build_su10 1" --define "build_su102 1" --define "build_su103 1" +--define "build_su110 1" Mandrake 10.x build --define "build_mdk 1"