Kobayashi Noritada wrote:
Hi,
From: Josip Rodin
Subject: Re: Mentioning proposed-updates on the main website
Date: Tue, 23 Oct 2007 21:57:13 +0200
On Tue, Oct 23, 2007 at 08:13:19PM +0200, Luk Claes wrote:
As you may (or may not) know proposed-updates is used as a basis for the
next point release. As such it would be good that people would use it
more so we find most bugs *before* a point release. To make this happen
I want to mention proposed-updates more visibly on the main website.
Does anyone have good ideas how and where on the website I should
mention proposed-updates (and oldstable-proposed-updates and maybe the
process involved)?
/releases/stable/errata actually includes some information about
that, but I'm not sure where else. Maybe we need a new page called
/releases/proposed-updates that explains the concept better, and
then link that one from other places?
FYI http://www.debian.org/security/faq#proposed-updates currently
explains that. Also,
It only explains it very briefly and only to illustrate the connection
with the security archive...
http://ftp-master.debian.org/proposed-updates.html shows the status.
I worry about the status of the proposed updates. Those packages are
not always released; only packages accepted by the Stable Release
Manager are released and other packages will be dropped. So, IMHO
those packages should not be recommended, unlike security updates.
Enough explanation will be required.
Wrong. The status shows what's in the p-u-new queue. All that is
accepted is in proposed-updates and gets released in the next point
release...
One more reason to have proper documentation...
Cheers
Luk
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