How does the Team work?

Faré fahree at gmail.com
Wed Jul 14 07:37:26 UTC 2010


On 14 July 2010 02:37, Christoph Egger <christoph at debian.org> wrote:
>> I have a .deb for cl-launch ready for upload, except that it depends
>> on cl-asdf 2.000, which hasn't been packaged yet (or has it?).
>
>    cl-asdf is at 1.7?? at the moment (thankfully also in testing since
> today). So a update to 2. would be needed for that. As Debian nears the
> freeze for the next release "squeeze" that should be done carefully and
> rather soon or after squeeze is released
>
1.7 is old, buggy, and not supported. It would be *really* nice to
have 2.004 out there.

>> What should I do between debian's asdf.git and upstream's? Should I
>> merge them? Should I get write access first, then build a package,
>> then try to get it approved? Or should I modify the upstream copy and
>> build a package first, and some DD will pull the alioth version after
>> my package has been approved?
>
>    looking at the debian repository work is probably currently done
> like this:
>
>    1: asdf upstream git is pulled into the "upstream" branch
>    2: upstream branch is merged into master
>    3: debian specific modifications done there
>    4: Build against the tarball provided by upstream
>
Do you know the recipe for that?

>    This also e.g. allows for having separat branches for
> debian/experimental debian/stable or ubuntu uploads while head goes into
> debian/unstable.
>
>    If you work on it I guess it's best to push the stuff all to
> git.debian.org where other Debian guys have access as well. Getting
> write access shouldn't be hard (I can do that for example if you apply
> to the team).
>
I requested to join the team on alioth.

>    If you have something ready just send a mail to [0] telling which
> package should be uploaded (and make sure it's up-to-date on
> git.d.o).
>
I'm waiting for write access and/or help. Or maybe I shouldn't.

[ François-René ÐVB Rideau | Reflection&Cybernethics | http://fare.tunes.org ]
The last good thing written in C was Franz Schubert's Symphony number 9.
        — Erwin Dieterich <erwin at cvt12.verfahrenstechnik.uni-stuttgart.de>



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