Hi Reinhard, I don't blame you. I think that for Debian to upgrade a package, changing a global setting, break some of its dependencies, and then kick out the resulting broken packages a month later (nearly a year before the expected release date) seems pretty harsh. In this case it took me 4.5 months to fix the issue from when you reported it to me, so unless a package has at least one full-time developer, a month simply isn't enough to fix this issue. Not even close for a hobbyist like myself.
Thanks, Chris. On Sun, 9 Jun 2019 at 23:26, Reinhard Tartler <siret...@gmail.com> wrote: > Agreed! > > In this case, the bug was reported on Aug 24 2018 by Adrian Bunk. It was > removed about a months later, namely on September 23, for failing to build > from source. Four weeks is arguably quite fast. Or quite slow, depending on > whom you talk to. > > I probably could have reacted by disabling the test suite. Or by prodding > you in those four weeks harder. Or at last have the bug fixed by end of > last year, which would have left enough time to re-migrate to testing. In > the future, I'll know better. > > Again, sorry. I'm happy to help with getting the package to > buster-backports once it opens. > > -rt > > On Sun, Jun 9, 2019 at 5:29 PM Chris Wilson <ch...@simply-italian.co.uk> > wrote: > >> Hi all, >> >> It seems a bit egregious to kick out packages that were broken by a minor >> version upgrade in one of their dependencies (which after all is not >> supposed to break anything), without any warning, let alone time to fix >> such a complex issue properly. >> >> I hope that Debian will consider carefully whether this course of action >> was really in the best interests of its users. >> >> Thanks, Chris. >> > > -- > regards, > Reinhard >