GNU bug report logs -
#63536
Function to update Emacs itself (for example 29.1 to 29.2)
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Reported by: Andrew Goh <andrewgoh95 <at> yahoo.com.sg>
Date: Tue, 16 May 2023 11:41:01 UTC
Severity: wishlist
Tags: wontfix
Done: Stefan Kangas <stefankangas <at> gmail.com>
Bug is archived. No further changes may be made.
Full log
Message #20 received at 63536 <at> debbugs.gnu.org (full text, mbox):
On 5/17/2023 6:37 AM, Eli Zaretskii wrote:
> So you want a command to check whether a newer Emacs is available?
> But where should this command look? Many (most?) people install
> precompiled binaries prepared by their distros, and I assume those
> distros have their "check for updates" service or something?
>
> We could check on the GNU FTP site, but how many users will want to
> download and build Emacs from sources?
>
> What do other people think about this?
I think we could fairly easily *check* for the existence of a newer
Emacs release, but the hard part is what to do about it. Is it enough to
merely tell the user, "Emacs 29.1 is released," and just expect the user
to figure out how to update?
For users who get their Emacs from their distro, the distro is
responsible for updates then. We can ignore that case.[1] (Ditto for any
other package manager: PPAs, Homebrew, etc.)
However, for users who get their Emacs from GNU FTP, the only update
mechanism right now is 100% manual. It would be interesting to try to
fix that, but it also seems difficult: if the user downloaded Emacs and
compiled from source, can we make 100% sure that we can do that
programmatically for the next release? What if Emacs adds a new library
dependency? Maybe GNU FTP could also distribute binaries in some fashion
instead[2], but that's yet another complexity to work out. If we
distributed binaries, how would we do so?
If someone wanted to spend the time to figure out all the issues with
this, I think there'd be value in it, but I also think it's more effort
than it's worth (unless this is literally just a notification, nothing
more).
[1] That's what Firefox does too: if you install Firefox from Mozilla,
it'll handle updating itself, but if you install it from your distro,
the distro handles the updates.
[2] There are the MS-Windows binaries, but I don't think we should be
spending too much effort on something that would only benefit users of a
nonfree OS.
This bug report was last modified 179 days ago.
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