Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 4th Jun 2007 16:38 UTC, submitted by anonymous
Benchmarks "We have developed a new package-management tool, called Opium, that improves on current tools in two ways: Opium is complete, in that if there is a solution, Opium is guaranteed to find it, and Opium can optimize a user-provided objective function, which could for example state that smaller packages should be preferred over larger ones. We performed a comparative study of our tool against Debian's apt-get on 600 traces of real-world package installations. We show that Opium runs fast enough to be usable, and that its completeness and optimality guarantees provide concrete benefits to end users."
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Great....
by Excel Hearts Choi on Mon 4th Jun 2007 17:12 UTC
Excel Hearts Choi
Member since:
2006-07-08

Just what the world needs, another package manager. Save all the choice is good crap. A uniform way of installing/removing/upgrading would go a long way in making linux a more enticing offer to enterprise customers. So much time, money, and energy is wasted on creating a new (probably buggy when compared to linux mainstays like apt-get) way of doing something for which there already exist several quality candidates. Why not really make a difference and start lobbying hardware companies to open their specs, help code KDE 4, improve suspend/resume for the ever increasing number of laptop configurations, or any other the other worthy causes in the FOSS community.