Scripsit "W. Borgert" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > On Mon, Aug 15, 2005 at 12:42:27PM +0200, Henning Makholm wrote:
>> Yes - but how should Lintian detect it? Of course one could look for >> lines that start with whitespace plus "./configure ", but how reliable >> is that? > Attached test found some culprits: It seems like it might be worthwhile. Some packages would need overrides, of course. > aptitude /usr/share/doc/aptitude/README is upstream's entire user manual in text format. It contains a short section on how to get aptitude if one does not have a .deb available. I think this is fair, but it is of course correct that the file *contains* installation instructions. > finger ftp gettext libatk1.0-0 libpam0g libtiff4 libungif4g libxml2 > m4 man-db netkit-inetd tar telnet w3m zlib1g These READMEs seem to be actually useless for end users. > python2.3 The bulk of this README are installation instructions, but there is also a roadmap to other documentation that may be useful for end users and should be provided instead of the entire file. > sharutils Borderline case. Some useful information, but also confusing references to documentation files that do not exist in the .deb. > autofs dbus-1 dbus-glib-1 deborphan dhcp3-client docbook2x etherape > ethereal-common ettercap-common gimp-gap gjdoc gpm kismet libpcre3 > nano netkit-inetd nfs-common python-gtk2 ruby1.8 xfce4-session > xfwm4-themes xfwm4 I don't have these installed locally and did not bother to download them to check. -- Henning Makholm "Detta, sade de, vore rena sanningen; ty de kunde tala sanning lika väl som någon annan, när de bara visste vad det tjänade til."