Hi Matthias, On Thu, Sep 19, 2019 at 12:49:54AM +0200, Matthias Klumpp wrote: > > As I told you before: I have no idea about meson. It would be great if > > we could get it working but if we restrict the package to those > > architectures where it builds out of the box and save some manpower I > > bet the world will keep on turning round. > > It's not just that. Also the build needs to be changed to respect > Debian's compile flags, build a shared library and write a pkg-config > file. All doable with Makefiles, but not really much fun. At that > point just using Meson becomes easier. > The package is team-maintained, right? In that case I may just give > this a shot this weekend and get the biod package to build again. It > shouldn't actually by hard to do at all (famous last words.... :P)
Its team maintained and you are member of the team. Just push whatever you consider sensible. > > > Btw, if libundead has no users anymore, removing it completely may be > > > a good idea - we don't need to maintain something that's dead and has > > > no users. > > > > I was about to file a removal request to ftpmaster before you said in > > your last mail that the former build issue might have been caused due > > to the lack of libundead. I would really love to get rid of unneeded > > packages. > > Better check for reverse dependencies, but if there are none, I don't > see a need to keep it. $ apt-cache rdepends libundead0 libundead0 Reverse Depends: libundead-dev sambamba libundead-dev libbiod0 > Undead is basically deprecated & removed D > stdlib modules with zero or very little maintenance, so generally > something a project wants to get rid of rather quickly anyway, and > quite likely nothing worth keeping in Debian on its own. So I'll ask for removal since if I understood you correctly it will go away from both projects above. Thanks a lot for your help Andreas. -- http://fam-tille.de