>>>>> "Christian" == Christian Surchi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Christian> Ari wrote to me in the end of october to ask me about Christian> my intention about logjam packaging. I had an enormous Christian> backlog and I could not be able to reply. Then he filed Christian> a wishlist bug report (#166993) for the new upstream Christian> release for logjam (4.0.0). Upstream web site Christian> (http://logjam.danga.com) reports that 4.0.0 is Christian> released on 29 Oct 2002. Bug report was sent on 29 Oct Christian> 2002 (!). Christian> On 17 Nov 2002 Ari made a NMU for logjam Christian> 4.0.0+cvs.2002.11.17 and another one a few days after Christian> that date, IIRC, without a note to me. I was handling Christian> bugs for logjam, as you can see in BTS (#165281). Build Christian> failure reported by Junichi Uekawa in that bug was Christian> actually a libcurl-dev bug (#169654). I reported and Christian> maintainer closed with an upload. So, honestly after reading your message, I'm not quite sure what you're complaining about. If you're complaining that the NMU was handled improperly and that the communication/policy should have been better, then it seems you're right. The person performing the NMU has already indicated that they are sorry they didn't follow policy and so unless you can give evidence that you think they will continue to fail to follow policy in future then it seems like an honest mistake. If you're arguing that the NMU shouldn't have been done then I think I disagree. Based on the evidence that you presented, our users and the free software community were better served by having that package updated. And frankly no response from October 29 to mid November seems like enough time that an NMU is reasonable. Yes, the NMU should have been to delayed; yes you should have been contacted. But other than your feelings getting hurt, what was the actual harm done to Debian? And yes, your feelings getting hurt is a real concern; it sucks to be a volunteer and to have someone disrespect your work. But communication problems do happen and it seems reasonable to treat them as communications problems and move on with life.