On Fri, Feb 09, 2018 at 04:02:42PM +0000, Ian Jackson wrote: > Philipp Kern writes ("Re: Debian part of a version number when epoch is > bumped"): > > You say upstream version. But I'd say that rollbacks are exactly that: > > reuse of a different epoch with the same upstream version. Like what > > happened to imagemagick multiple times. > > I don't know precisely what you mean by "rollback". If you mean > "change our mind about uploading foo new upstream version 3, and go > back to foo upstream version 2", I would not encourage use of an epoch > for that. I would upload foo version "3+really2". This is ugly but > fits much better into everything.
That said, even if you did use an epoch in this situation, it shouldn't cause a problem that you're reusing the *upstream* part of the version, because the contents of that tarball will (one hopes) be identical. You'd just need to make sure that the Debian revision isn't reused. -- Colin Watson [cjwat...@debian.org]