Thank you --- I actually completely failed to spot this email when it came
through...
On Sat, 1 Jun 2024 at 00:02, Bastian Germann wrote:
> I am uplaoding a NMU to DELAYED/10 in order to fix this.
> Please find the debdiff attached.
Thank you for fixing these; I completely missed both of these bugs when
they got filed.
On Mon, 20 Dec 2021 at 15:33, Stephen Kitt wrote:
> Package: ufiformat
> Version: 0.9.9-1
> Severity: normal
> Tags: patch pending
>
> Dear maintainer,
>
> I've prepared an NMU for ufiformat (versioned as 0.
Thanks --- yes, that needs fixing. Unfortunately, while wearing my upstream
hat, I've rewritten the build system, but I've applied some changes to make
it honour variables like CC and PKG_CONFIG. The diff is here, if you're
interested: https://github.com/davidgiven/wordgrinder/pull/181/files
The n
Ah, I've just spotted (via the automatically reported bug data...) that
there is such a constraint but it's only at a Recommends level. I think
this should be upgraded to a Depends.
On Tue, 2 Nov 2021 at 23:57, David Given wrote:
> Package: libstdc++-arm-none-eabi-newlib
> Versi
Package: libstdc++-arm-none-eabi-newlib
Version: 15:8-2019-q3-1+13
Severity: important
X-Debbugs-Cc: d...@cowlark.com
Dear Maintainer,
Currently the testing/unstable version of gcc-arm-none-eabi is
15:10.3-2021.07-2 (a.k.a. 10.3.1) and the version of libstdc++-arm-none-eabi-
newlib is 15:8-2019-q
Package: qemu-user
Version: 1:5.1+dfsg-4+b2
Severity: normal
Tags: upstream
X-Debbugs-Cc: d...@cowlark.com
I have a test program for the PowerPC which reliably causes qemu-ppc to crash,
apparently on startup. I haven't been able to get it to tell me what it's doing
during the crash. The minimal pr
It looks like ncurses has dropped KEY_EVENT:
https://invisible-island.net/ncurses/NEWS.html#index-t20200817
I'll fix this upstream and produce a new package --- it's about time anyway.
On Sun, 27 Sep 2020 at 20:51, Lucas Nussbaum wrote:
> Source: wordgrinder
> Version: 0.7.2-1
> Severity: serio
I've just run into this myself with a Bluray drive:
$ uname -a
Linux hilfy 4.19.0-5-amd64 #1 SMP Debian 4.19.37-3 (2019-05-15) x86_64
GNU/Linux
$ smartctl -i /dev/cdrom
smartctl 6.6 2017-11-05 r4594 [x86_64-linux-4.19.0-5-amd64] (local build)
Copyright (C) 2002-17, Bruce Allen, Christian Franke,
wski wrote:
> On Tue, Oct 31, 2017 at 11:33:13AM +0100, David Given wrote:
> > * Package name: wordgrinder
> > Version: 0.7-1
>
> > WordGrinder's not a new package --- it's been in Debian since wheezy.
> > Unfortunately my existing sponsor has retired an
Package: sponsorship-requests
Severity: normal
Dear mentors,
I am looking for a sponsor for my package "wordgrinder":
* Package name: wordgrinder
Version: 0.7-1
Upstream Author: David Given
* URL: http://cowlark.com/wordgrinder
* License: MIT
Section: editors
It builds th
prove it:
https://mentors.debian.net/package/wordgrinder
What's the user value in keeping 0.5.1 in oldstable rather than just
upgrading to the stable version?
On Tue, 11 Jul 2017 at 00:22 Cyril Brulebois wrote:
> David Given (2017-07-10):
> > Well, I actually approached backports, a
0 Jul 2017 at 22:27 Adam D. Barratt
wrote:
> On Mon, 2017-07-10 at 22:21 +0200, Alexander Wirt wrote:
> > On Mon, 10 Jul 2017, Adam D. Barratt wrote:
> >
> > > Control: tags -1 + moreinfo
> > >
> > > On Mon, 2017-07-10 at 19:44 +, David Given wrote:
Package: release.debian.org
Severity: normal
Tags: jessie
User: release.debian@packages.debian.org
Usertags: pu
The version in jessie of my package WordGrinder is painfully old and has a
number of showstopping bugs (document corruption and loss of data). The next
available version in Debian is
On 16/10/15 01:12, Jean Charles Delépine wrote:
[...]
> Installing lua-ldoc makes wordgrinder happy.
lua-filesystem, actually, but yes, there's an embarrassingly missing
dependency there. Thanks; will fix.
--
┌─── dg@cowlark.com ─ http://www.cowlark.com ─
│ "There is nothing in the world
For reference, the $HOME-not-being-read-only-issue in pbuilder is known
about: https://bugs.debian.org/441052
--
┌─── dg@cowlark.com ─ http://www.cowlark.com ─
│ "There is nothing in the world so dangerous --- and I mean *nothing*
│ --- as a children's story that happens to be true." ---
On 13/10/15 20:12, Aaron M. Ucko wrote:
[...]
> Good question. You could probably achieve the desired effect by running
>
> cowbuilder --login --save-after-login
I had a play and couldn't make it do anything useful --- I've asked on
debian-mentors@ and will try to figure it out. Ta.
[...]
> No
On 13/10/15 16:39, Aaron M. Ucko wrote:
[...]
> Automatic builds of wordgrinder failed due to trying to install
> something into the builder's home directory, which is deliberately
> absent on the autobuilders because builds should leave it alone.
Bah. I'm both upstream and maintainer, so...
(I b
Package: python2.7
Version: 2.7.9-1
Severity: normal
I am unable to build programs using Python's distutils, because it's
invoking the wrong compiler. It's trying to use a gcc 4.9 flag, but is
invoking gcc 4.7, which aborts due to an unrecognised flag.
I think what's happened here is that it's pi
On 7/15/14, 12:09 PM, Jeroen Oortwijn wrote:
[...]
> Current nightly builds have different package names, so the patch
> doesn't work anymore.
Oh, well...
[...]
> Because David's patch doesn't work anymore, I have created a new
> patch. See attached file.
> This patch can also be found at my baza
On 3/11/14, 1:22 AM, Cyril Brulebois wrote:
> Hi David,
Sorry for the delay --- very busy with other things.
> David Given (2013-12-20):
[...]
>> Currently package management builds are only available in nightly
>> releases but there should be an official release Real Soon N
Package: os-prober
Version: 1.63
Severity: important
Tags: patch
Haiku's new package management builds have changed the way the kernel
and boot
sector is laid out, and os-prober's detection routines no longer detect such
Haiku partitions.
Currently package management builds are only available in
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On 15/10/13 11:53, Hideki Yamane wrote:
[...]
> Attached patch would fix this FTBFS, could you consider to apply
> it, please?
Thank you very much --- that works fine, although I've removed the -f
option to avoid changing the autoconf files that alrea
I have just successfully built adb on armhf by manually editing the
control file. I can't test to see whether it works because this is on an
Android chroot, so not all the device nodes exist and it won't run, but
there weren't any problems with the build.
Was there any specific reason for restrict
Package: lua-wsapi
Version: 1.5-2
Severity: grave
Justification: renders package unusable
Dear Maintainer,
The /usr/bin/wsapi.cgi script is unrunnable as it has DOS line endings. When
it is run the Lua interpreter cannot be found, as it tries to look for a file
called "lua5.1\r", which of course
Package: npm
Version: 1.1.4~dfsg-2
Severity: normal
Short summary:
$ npm -g get prefix
/usr
$ sudo npm -g get prefix
/usr/local
I've tried to investigate what's going on, but have gotten lost in the maze of
npm configuration files. I suspect that the tweak that Debian's done to split
the prefix
Package: wnpp
Severity: wishlist
I am intending to package the next version of the spey SMTP proxy for
Debian. It is available at:
http://spey.sourceforge.net
It is licensed under the GPL v2.
(Disclaimer: I am upstream.)
--
┌─── dg@cowlark.com ─ http://www.cowlark.com ─
│
│ "I have a
Package: wordgrinder
Version: 0.2-1
Severity: normal
You can unbind the default keybinding, but then trying to assign a new
keybinding doesn't work. (Known upstream.)
-- System Information:
Debian Release: lenny/sid
APT prefers testing
APT policy: (500, 'testing')
Architecture: i386 (i686)
Juhapekka Tolvanen wrote:
[...]
% wordgrinder
Lua error: /usr/share/wordgrinder/main.lua:16: module 'lfs' not found:
Yes, indeed --- incompetence on my part, I'm afraid, I put the
appropriate dependencies in Build-Depends instead of Depends.
Workaround: install liblua5.1-filesystem0 and it s
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Package: wnpp
Severity: wishlist
WordGrinder is a simple word processor designed to run in a terminal
(written by myself). It very lightweight, supports basic style only and
is designed for text entry rather than typesetting.
It is available here:
h
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Robert Millan wrote:
[...]
I'm interested in these functions too. I might be able to implement them;
please could you provide a minimal architecture-independent test case? Even
if I can't do it, having this might be helpful to someone else.
Sorry
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Robert Millan wrote:
[...]
I'm interested in these functions too. I might be able to implement them;
please could you provide a minimal architecture-independent test case? Even
if I can't do it, having this might be helpful to someone else.
Sorry
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Hash: SHA1
Package: wnpp
Severity: wishlist
ufiformat is a simple command-line utility for formatting floppy disks when
using external USB floppy drives. (superformat and fdformat cannot do this.)
It is available here:
http://www.geocities.jp/tedi_world/format_
Package: libpcl1
Version: 1.6-1
I have a situation on the ARM platform where if I compile an executable to use
both libpcl and libpthread, then even if I'm not actually using threads,
trying to do anything to a coroutine causes an immediate segmentation fault.
To replicate:
$ gcc /usr/share/doc/
Package: libc6
Version: 2.3.6-7
Attempting to use any of the ucontext family of functions --- makecontext,
setcontext, getcontext, swapcontext --- produces the following link-time error:
makecontext is not implemented and will always fail
It's right; it does.
I realise they're a bit exotic,
On Saturday 19 November 2005 05:10, Daniel Jacobowitz wrote:
[...]
> We could ship a fourth variant of fifth variant of glibc for i686 using
> LinuxThreads. I am not particularly motivated to do this considering
> how rarely anyone encounters this problem, and the corresponding cost
> in archive s
Package: glibc
Version: 2.3.5-8
Severity: important
When using 2.4 kernels, the linuxthreads library makes an incorrect assumption
about stack usage that causes applications to crash if they use user stacks.
This does not occur on 2.6 kernels (because they use a different threading
library). I
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