Hi. On Thu, Nov 7, 2013 at 7:34 PM, TomasHnyk <tomash...@gmail.com> wrote: > I do not understand this. First, it should be fix released for non- > specific version of ubuntu as I cannot update in Saucy.
You can usually grab the newest versions of youtube-dl from Debian unstable, as that is where I'm doing my job. I think that I can set up something (say a reminder) to ask Ubuntu to sync from Debian every time that I upload a new version. I plan on uploading one this weekend by the way. > Second, there is nothing automatic about this. The user must explicitly > download a new version (and even provide the password). If he does not > trust it, he should not do that. > > Would not an explicit warning be better then just removing the option? > > i.e.: > 1) sudo youtube-dl -U > 2) there is no way to know that youtube-dl is not evil, do you know what you > are doing? yes/no In my Debian packages, I don't consider the option of removing the update, as it is, exactly as you say, a strictly voluntary option of the user. I consider this the equivalent of removing the option of the user to download python packages via pip, perl packages via cpan, node.js packages via npm, eclipse extensions etc. So, as long as I maintain youtube-dl in Debian, the Debian package won't be patched and will be as similar to upstream as possible (and, in fact, I have avoided patching youtube-dl in Debian and submitted my changes upstream directly *before* I incorporated them in Debian). > This just means that youtube-dl gets useless early (or even before) the > distribution is released as I do not think it qualifies for a SRU. Then > the users must download the software from upstream defeating the purpose > of a distribution. Indeed. This kind of software is a moving target. See my long comments on Debian's NEWS file regarding the changes in Youtube's provision of videos with audio and video in separate. The next upload that I do will have fixes for vimeo, as they have changed things. In other words, web scrapers consist of a class of packages that don't really qualify for an long term release. The same thing happens with browsers, but a big browser is simply a very large program, while the program that I package is a small one that people can even opt to not ship in a release. What do all the big browsers and the web scrapers have in common? They manipulate changing code provided by 3rd parties. Regards, -- Rogério Brito : rbrito@{ime.usp.br,gmail.com} : GPG key 4096R/BCFCAAAA http://cynic.cc/blog/ : github.com/rbrito : profiles.google.com/rbrito DebianQA: http://qa.debian.org/developer.php?login=rbrito%40ime.usp.br -- You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu. https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1063469 Title: Disable --update option To manage notifications about this bug go to: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/youtube-dl/+bug/1063469/+subscriptions -- ubuntu-bugs mailing list ubuntu-bugs@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-bugs