Hello,

I've recently seen a package that was imported into Fedora without a package review. I've noticed this because the packages doesn't even install and I wanted to check if this could have been caught in the package review but I couldn't find it, so I've checked the fedora-scm-requests ticket.

The ticket at fedora-scm-requests was created with exception=true. I am not going to link to it, because I am not here to point fingers. I am just genuinely curious.

According to https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/packaging-guidelines/ReviewGuidelines/#_package_review_process we have 3 kinds of exceptions:

- FPC grants an explicit exemption from the process...
- The package is being created so that multiple versions of the same package can coexist in the distribution... - The package exists in both Fedora and RHEL, but the packager wants to ship it in EPEL under an alternative name...

In those cases, the packager requests the repo with --exception, makes sense.

However, who checks if the flag was used according to the rules? Because apparently, is seems that nobody does. Is it expected that we are all responsible people who would not abuse this simply to avoid package reviews?

--
Miro Hrončok
--
Phone: +420777974800
IRC: mhroncok
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