Dismiss
Announcing Stack Overflow Documentation

We started with Q&A. Technical documentation is next, and we need your help.

Whether you're a beginner or an experienced developer, you can contribute.

Sign up and start helping → Learn more about Documentation →

We have a web app we package into an RPM. We have a problem with the version field of the RPM.

Let's say we have installed our rpm: foo-2.1.0.007

007 is our build number.

Now when we try to install a newer rpm, foo-2.1.0.010, yum says "There's nothing to update".

When I've remade the RPMs, but removed the leading zeroes, the problem was solved:

foo-2.1.0.7

foo-2.1.0.10

According to this link each segment of the version is compared as an integer, but practice shows otherwise.

So my question is: What is the version comparison algorithm for RPM and why leading zeroes interfere?

share|improve this question

Yum just asks rpm to compare them. You can install rpmdevtools, and you then use:

% rpmdev-vercmp foo-2.1.0.010 foo-2.1.0.007
0:foo-2.1.0.010 is newer

...which is what you'd expect. Unless you have an epoch in the 007 package, I'm not sure why you are getting a different answer. What version of rpm do you have? What does vercmp say for you?

share|improve this answer
    
I have no idea how, but now everything works as expected, meaning 010 is installed on top of 007. Weird – Asaf Mesika Jun 24 '10 at 12:14
    
Thanks, allowed me to figure out that RPM really does think that 0.901 is newer than 0.92 but not 0.920. Obviously compares dotted integers rather than decimal numbers. – theory Aug 29 '12 at 18:00

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.