Howdy all, I'm having a conversation with a Debian packager regarding a manpage that, currently, is a mere placeholder saying “please see foocommand --help”, giving none of the useful information normally found in a manpage.
I would like the specific package to remain anonymous at the moment (though, of course, a quick search will reveal it), because in this thread I'm only wanting to understand current practice and expectations, not accuse anyone in particular. Debian policy §12.1 states, in part: ===== 12.1. Manual pages ------------------ […] Each program, utility, and function should have an associated manual page included in the same package. […] If no manual page is available, this is considered as a bug and should be reported to the Debian Bug Tracking System (the maintainer of the package is allowed to write this bug report themselves, if they so desire). Do not close the bug report until a proper man page is available. […] ===== The response from the maintainer (who is also the upstream author) so far is, essentially, “Patches welcome, but I'm not interested in maintaining manpages”. I have submitted a manpage as a patch. However, that response pretty much guarantees that the maintainer won't be taking the initiative to keep the manpage up to date. Am I right in thinking that it is nevertheless the maintainer's responsibility to do so? I don't like Debian policy being used as a blunt instrument, but I must admit my mental reaction to the maintainer's response was along the lines of “Too bad; in accepting the role of package maintainer, you accepted the ongoing task of maintaining manpages for every command, utility, and function in the package”. Wording and tone aside, is that expectation reasonable? What course of action is open to a user of the package, with a maintainer who has made it plain they're not interested in following (this part of) policy? -- \ “If you're a horse, and someone gets on you, and falls off, and | `\ then gets right back on you, I think you should buck him off | _o__) right away.” —Jack Handey | Ben Finney -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-devel-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org