Hi, I’m looking to open-source a small CLI application I wrote and I’m struggling with how to provide the built app since just providing the binary will not work. I had a friend test it and he had to compile from source due to glibc version differences.

My first thought was providing it as a flatpak but that isn’t really suitable for CLI software.

I’ve googled around a bit and most guides I find just mention packaging separately for multiple package managers/formats (rpm, apt etc.). This seems really inefficient/hard to maintain. What is the industry standard for packaging a Linux software for multi-distro use?

  • Kangie@lemmy.srcfiles.zip
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    8 months ago

    You don’t have to!

    If a downstream distribution wants your software they will build and package it themselves and maintain that infrastructure.

    You could provide an example rpm spec (etc) to make their lives easier but it’s not on you to provide a binary package that works everywhere; you released the source code so any given user / distro can compile it for themselves.

    Just make sure that your build infrastructure and docs are up to speed, and ideally implement some CI/CD and testing to catch any breaking changes.

    • Lorgres@lemmy.worldOP
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      8 months ago

      I see, thanks for the info. I wasn’t even aware that this developer/maintainer dynamic exists. It makes a lot of sense though. I’ll start by creating some documentation about building the software and then maybe create an example package for rpm.

    • FizzyOrange@programming.dev
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      8 months ago

      This only applies if your program becomes popular or you go to a huge amount of effort packaging it yourself. And even then updates are going to be a huge pain. Do you want your users to be able to use the latest version easily?

      There’s quite a big gap between “no users” and “included in all distros” where this advice doesn’t apply.