]] Stuart Prescott > Essentially, this is a request that the TC overrule both Debian > maintainers *and* derivative maintainers in what they have agreed as a > workflow that obviously works for them. Today, Debian decides to not > allow debian/patches/vendor.series, then tomorrow, a derivative > patches dpkg-source and Debian is asked to decide whether > debian/patches/vendor-dammit-i-want-these-patches-applied.series is > allowed in the source package.
I can see where you are coming from, but I disagree with your conclusions. Hypothetically, if a downstream distribution implemented support vendor.series without there being any support in Debian for it, I don't think we would disallow vendor.series in Debian. (I think it would be a bad idea for a downstream to patch such functionality into dpkg, but there are many bad ideas that should not be forbidden.) > (Footnote: Sean has referred this under §6.1.3, requesting a decision but > since this is overriding a (set of) maintainer(s) that includes those using > vendor.series and the dpkg maintainers, I assume §6.1.4 applies.) I believe his request might also be considered under §6.1.1, since we're being asked about a policy change. (After talking to Sean in person, he said he intended it under §6.1.3, not §6.1.1, though.) -- Tollef Fog Heen UNIX is user friendly, it's just picky about who its friends are