On Sat, 1 Nov 2014 21:08:56 Julien Cristau wrote: > > It is hardly a "worst possible outcome" when all alternatives are equally > > suitable. > > But they're clearly not.
Let's distinguish generic statement from the particular case please. From mysql-workbench prospective there might be no difference in which client package to use. Let's consider hypothetical example: M-W uses `mysql` command line client only to check DB connectivity (in fact it is not how M-W really checks connectivity). All packages providing "virtual-mysql-client" have `mysql` executable taking exactly the same command line options and capable to connect to any server. Why prefer a particular client? Here you're failing to answer my questions... > The default mysql client is the mysql-client > package. Why do you insist that it isn't? I've never claimed otherwise. I merely see little reason to prefer "default" client. But I would agree if you'd say that it would be a good idea to recommend "mysql-client" as first alternative archive-wide to ensure that it is always a "default" client. However it would hardly explain why you consider lack of such alternative as "serious" bug. > > > > I've realised that "virtual-mysql-client" can be demoted to Recommends > > > > -- > > > > please advise if that change warrants an unblock in which case I will > > > > upload to "unstable". Thank you. > > > > > > Not if it stays virtual-only. C'mon, why does it matter in Recommends as much as you say it matters in Depends? I'm OK to upload M-W to "unstable" with Recommends: mysql-client | virtual-mysql-client instead of Depends: virtual-mysql-client I'm willing to comply because you insist, not because I'm convinced. IMHO this issue is not worth arguing and I recognise (however little) benefit from defaulting to default "mysql-client" client even if it makes no functional difference for recommending package. If you believe it's better -- that is enough for me. Please advise if I shall proceed with upload. Thanks. -- Cheers, Dmitry Smirnov. --- Science embraces facts and debates opinion; religion embraces opinion and debates the facts. -- Tom Heehler, The Well-Spoken Thesaurus.
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