Glenn McGrath dijo [Thu, Sep 18, 2003 at 06:25:37PM +1000]: > On Thu, 18 Sep 2003 02:01:25 -0500 > Manoj Srivastava <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > Pristine sources are already a desired, but not required, > > characteristic. There are enough brain dead upstream packaging > > practices that we can not mandate pristine sources. > > Dont go blaming "upstream" for debians problems, lots of other distro's > ship pristine sources, thats a poor excuse.
It *is* upstream's fault sometimes. There are many cases of upstream developers distributing non-free files (i.e., RFCs) which must be removed in order to distribute an otherwise DFSG-free package in main. Some upstream authors feel it is nice to provide binaries together with their sources - sometimes i386 binaries, but this tends to happen more than anywhere else with Java packages (remember the Write Once Run Anywhere fiasco/mantra?). Some things are not distributable in a source package. > As far as i know, the problem is that our packaging tools cant handle > the common tar.bz2 format, or having seperate patches. This is the least of the reasons. As you say, this is being worked on, but... Usually the case is that upstream's tarball goes against our policy. As Branden once told me, pristine sources is a nice goal, but cannot be made a requirement. Greetings, -- Gunnar Wolf - [EMAIL PROTECTED] - (+52-55)5630-9700 ext. 1366 PGP key 1024D/8BB527AF 2001-10-23 Fingerprint: 0C79 D2D1 2C4E 9CE4 5973 F800 D80E F35A 8BB5 27AF

