On 17885 March 1977, Guillem Jover wrote:

I'm not seeing how it is feasible for the Archive team to properly
handle the overrides, when they no longer have custody of the NEW
processing, which is where overrides were applied. (I guess though,
no new/unknown sections and priority values should be let through
regardless of them coming as-is from the NEW processing, so perhaps
either packages getting rejected or the invalid/unknown values should
be getting coerced to known values, say unknown/optional?)

But if the DFSG team would be in charge of the overrides, would they
be taking care of updates outside of the NEW processing? What about
their definition?

If the intention is for the DFSG team to be in charge of the overrides
during NEW, and the Archive team to be in charge of the overrides in
other contexts including definition of values for example Priority and
Section (and for Sections, their description/meaning), how are
discrepancies going to be agreed on and coordinated?

If the intention is really for the Archive team to handle all the
overrides, then any such fix will need to happen after the fact, and
will require filing a request once the packages have been accepted
through NEW, which looks like unnecessary overhead (because fixing the
metadata in the source packages is not enough to trigger a change).

I don't think this is a problem worth spending much time on.

First, DFSG team. The way NEW processing works, each accept submits the
overrides for the package in question. So they can adjust them to
whatever they think is best. (Sometimes a maintainer may make a mistake
there).

Then, changes. They aren't that many, so no need to adjust ways of
dealing with them.

And last, definition of what exists and can be set - also keep it where
it was (ie. archive team). It's not like this is changing all that
often anyways.

--
bye, Joerg

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