This is part of an email exchange Sven and I had. Simply put, I put
in a new alpha binary of dpkg-1.4.0.19 that represented nothing but a
recompile to pick up new libg++, ncurses, etc. Sven suggested that
this warranted a non-maintainer-release number, whereas I had gotten
the idea that non-maintainer-releases suggested code changes.
Policy people? Any suggestions?
Mike.
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Michael Alan Dorman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Sven Rudolph <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > Michael Alan Dorman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > > This is simply a recompile to pick up current libraries, libg++272,
> > > ncurses3.4, etc. If you could please shove it in, despite the version
> > > number match, I'd appreciate it. I've cc:'d debian-alpha so they'll
> > > know it's there as well.
> > IMHO you should make such a recompile a regular non-maintainer
> > release.
>
> I thought about it, but it's literally 0 source changes, simply a
> recompile. non-maintainer-release suggests source changes to me---as
> I have just done with gpm.
But it is the official mechanism to tell people that something
changed.
Whenever someone reports a bug and includes the complete version
number you have to ask whether he took the old or the new one.
We might want to turn ithis into a policy topic.
Sven
--
Sven Rudolph <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
http://www.sax.de/~sr1/
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