Christian Schwarz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > ``Whenever the source package is changed WRT to the last uploaded > version, its version number has to be incremented. In addition, > if the source package is not changed but the binary package > changed (because it has been recompiled in another environment), > the version number has to be incremented too (this is, the source ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ > package has to be changed and uploaded again) to make sure ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ > dpkg/dselect recognizes the changed package.''
I completely disagree with the last sentence. If I compile xfree for m68k and because of a broken ldd, it has hosed dependencies (this is not so fictional an example, it actually happened with ncurses), I should be able to recompile X with a different version number and *only upload binaries*. What would redoing and uploading the source get me or anyone else? o it takes 5 days to compile X on my machine, I don't even want to think how long it would take dpkg-source to work on a 42 Mb source tree. o it would spark off 100% pointless recompiles on other architectures. o it serves no purpose. The only source change is to the changelog, and that is included in the deb. And it doesn't help the rational of this policy (that is: source, or no source, dpkg/dselect will still recognise foo_1.2-1.0.1 to be newer than fo_1.2-1). -- James -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] .