From: | Christoph Berg <myon(at)debian(dot)org> |
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To: | Sasa Vilic <sasavilic(at)gmail(dot)com> |
Cc: | pgsql-pkg-debian(at)lists(dot)postgresql(dot)org |
Subject: | Re: Debian package source |
Date: | 2019-02-02 12:41:49 |
Message-ID: | 20190202124149.GA14677@msg.df7cb.de |
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Lists: | pgsql-pkg-debian |
Re: Sasa Vilic 2019-02-01 <CAOJhpYeBzF+Wb=cOi8Tv7RvS52u6MfYMLeHkJTUKT4Zqgr1Cng(at)mail(dot)gmail(dot)com>
> but I believe I can manage from here. I was looking for where you keep
> source of debian packages for postgres repository, but if it all comes from
> debian, then I know what I need to do.
Right. apt.pg.o packages are using the same source as Debian, just
recompiled with a version number with a suffix.
In some cases, additional tweaks are applied to get packages built for
older distributions. In postgis' case, that is only the case on
trusty:
https://git.postgresql.org/gitweb/?p=pgapt.git;a=blob;f=jenkins/generate-pgdg-source#l296
> If you look at change log (
> https://salsa.debian.org/debian-gis-team/postgis/blob/master/debian/changelog
> )
> you can see that Debian went from 2.3.3 to 2.4.0. I have a legacy system
> with postgres 9.6 and I need to update postgis to 2.3.5 due to important
> bugfix that came along with 2.3.5 (and I can't used 2.4.0 or newer). I want
> to do this nicely, by creating Debian package and installing it (instead of
> manually compiling and installing).
You can take that git, check out the debian/2.3.3+dfsg-1 tag and start
from there. Chances are that this will Just Work.
Christoph
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