On Thu, Jul 25, 2019 at 08:45:48PM +0200, Paul Gevers wrote: > Control: tags -1 moreinfo > > Hi Chris, > > On 25-07-2019 18:51, Chris Lamb wrote: > >> PS: I failed to spot bugs against (some of) those packages communication > >> the removal, I think that would be nice for those maintainers. > > > > This might have been justifiably and fairly missed as it was dicussed > > quite some time, possibly years, ago. Not your fault, possibly ours… > > However, as Brian mentions we do really have no option but to use the > > 2.x branch of Django these days and, unfortunately, this means that > > Python 2.x support is accordingly dropped. > > It's OK to move on and it's very OK to do that at the beginning of a > release cycle. However I expect you to coordinate this with your reverse > dependencies and *I* didn't see that so far (but of course it's easy for > me to miss stuff). > > > The packages you list may thus need to be updated or removed. (I'm > > afraid I haven't looked into the specifics...) > > Sure. Contacting the maintainers, and they can help as well, I guess. > > >> Your package is trying to fix a CVE > > > > Can you elaborate? I'm a little distracted by DebConf stuff but I > > can't seem to grok what you mean here specifically. > > https://qa.debian.org/excuses.php?package=python-django says this upload > will fix bug #931316 in testing. That bug is about CVE-2019-12781. > Testing has not seen the fix yet, and due to the dropping of Python 2, > it will take time before it does, as python-django can not migrate > before reverse dependencies are fixed or removed. The latter isn't very > nice for your reverse dependencies if you didn't give them proper > heads-up. The former isn't nice for the python-django users of testing.
As mentioned on IRC the scope of CVE-2019-12781 seems acceptable and there's hardly a month which would better? This seems like a fine tradeoff to me. If there's something earth-shattering in 1.11, it would still be possible to fix that one via a targeted 1.11 upload to testing, I assume? Cheers, Moritz