Over this last year there seems to have been a noticeable divergence of maintainer opinion, on what has become known as vendoring, from a strict reading of [policy 4.13]. I think it's notable that the heading is [Embedded] copies and was [Convenience] copies since its inception, thankfully I found a request to expand this section using [vendoring].
[policy 4.13]: https://www.debian.org/doc/debian-policy/ch-source.html#embedded-code-copies [Embedded]: https://bugs.debian.org/955036 [Convenience]: https://bugs.debian.org/392362 [vendoring]: https://bugs.debian.org/907051 It is my reading of the situation that not only has this practice become more prevalent across multiple ecosystems since 2008, but that it can be a good thing when upstreams use it to better modularise their code. As a consequence, and in particular for large upstream projects, it is not a good use of maintainer time to package every single vendored library as a separate source package. See e.g. [kubernetes], [python BoF @25mins], [android-platform-tools], and even [uscan] grouping used by nodejs. [kubernetes]: https://bugs.debian.org/971515#172 [python BoF @25mins]: https://meetings-archive.debian.net/pub/debian-meetings/2021/DebConf21/debconf21-97-python-team-bof.webm [android-platform-tools]: https://salsa.debian.org/android-tools-team/admin/-/issues/40 [uscan]: https://manpages.debian.org/uscan#grouped_package Is there any objection to the following summary? 1. If the reused code is small and intended to be embedded into a package, then this MUST be documented in the [security-tracker]. 2. If the included project has already been packaged, then the Debian version SHOULD be used instead. 3. If modifications have been made, then those changes SHOULD be forwarded and/or the package ported to the official version. 4. When 2 or 3 are too onerous to maintain, the package MAY use the convenience copy but MUST document why in README.source and SHOULD be included in the [security-tracker]. 5. Where only a small number of unrelated projects are bundled, they SHOULD be uploaded as separate source packages. 6. If the upstream authors are largely the same, then vendored sub-projects MAY simply be built together as the same source. 7. A large number of vendored dependencies used only together for a single Debian package MAY be grouped into a single source upload. 8. If 6 or 7 are used initially but a new package has some overlap, then the new package MUST NOT duplicate the vendoring. The duplication SHOULD be packaged separately, then the original package SHOULD be updated to use the Debian version instead. 9. When upstream has a proven track record of promptly handling security vulnerabilities inside their vendored dependencies, then maintainers SHOULD follow the same practice, updating versions in lockstep. I might be misusing the MUST/SHOULD/MAY, so those can be dropped as needed, but I tried to capture the accepted practice and deliberately used all the different historical terms. For comparison, there's also [Fedora] policy, but apart from not having an in-band "bundled", I also think that the line has ended up being drawn marginally differently. [security-tracker]: https://salsa.debian.org/security-tracker-team/security-tracker/-/blob/master/data/embedded-code-copies [Fedora] https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/packaging-guidelines/#bundling
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