On Wednesday 02 February 2011 18:47:48 Willy Lambert wrote: > Hi, > > I am a "standard" orocos user and trying to become a "ros" orocos user. > Therefore I built all from git but I had some problems with dependencies > since I am on a Debian system. Here is my rosdep.yml : > > libreadline: > ubuntu: libreadline-dev > fedora: readline-devel > debian: libreadline-dev > omniorb: > ubuntu: omniorb4 omniidl4 omniorb4-nameserver libomniorb4-1 > libomniorb4-dev libomnithread3-dev libomnithread3c2 debian: omniorb4 > omniidl4 omniorb4-nameserver libomniorb4-1 libomniorb4-dev > libomnithread3-dev libomnithread3c2 gccxml: > ubuntu: gccxml > fedora: gccxml > debian: gccxml > antlr: > fedora: antlr3-C antlr-C++ > ubuntu: antlr libantlr-dev > debian: antlr libantlr-dev > rubygems: > fedora: rubygems > ubuntu: rubygems1.8 > debian: rubygems1.8 > libxslt: > fedora: libxslt-devel > ubuntu: libxslt1-dev > debian: libxslt1-dev > ruby1.8-dev: > ubuntu: > '10.10': ruby1.8-dev libruby1.8 > '10.04': ruby1.8-dev libopenssl-ruby1.8 > '9.10': ruby1.8-dev libopenssl-ruby1.8 > '9.04': ruby1.8-dev libopenssl-ruby1.8 > '8.10': ruby1.8-dev libopenssl-ruby1.8 > '8.04': ruby1.8-dev libopenssl-ruby1.8 > fedora: ruby ruby-devel openssl-devel > debian: ruby1.8-dev libruby1.8 > > > I would rather have send a patch but I do not really know how to do this (I > am not used to open source processes) If you used git you can easily create a patch with the 'git format-patch' command. > > I don't know where to post this between Orocos or ROS mailing list. What > would you suggest ? Both are fine.