* Anthony Towns [Fri, 28 Dec 2007 06:32:18 +1000]: > On Thu, Dec 27, 2007 at 04:21:20PM +0100, Adeodato Sim?? wrote: > > * Anthony Towns [Thu, 27 Dec 2007 17:34:49 +1000]: > > > On Wed, Dec 26, 2007 at 11:53:25PM +0100, Adeodato Sim?? wrote: > > > > *Personally*, I like the idea of Javier Fern??ndez-Sanguino expressed in > > > > the mail linked above of keeping debian_version as is, and introducing > > > > /etc/lsb-release with detailed information like: > > > > DISTRIB_ID=Debian > > > > DISTRIB_RELEASE=4.0 > > > > DISTRIB_CODENAME=etch > > > > DISTRIB_DESCRIPTION="Debian GNU/Linux 4.0 'etch'" > > > The problem with base-files providing /etc/debian_version is that it means > > > /etc/debian_version can really only tell you what version of base-files > > > is installed. So if you upgrade every other package but base-files from > > > 4.0r1 to 4.0r2, you have all the functionality of 4.0r2 but get reported > > > as > > > 4.0r1, and if you just upgrade base-files, you get reported as 4.0r2 while > > > still having the bugs from 4.0r1 that were meant to have been fixed. > > Yes, of course. And this is brought up whenever there's talk about > > /etc/debian_version. :-)
> Right, so why not fix it properly? (Did you read the rest of my mail?) Yes, I did, and thanks for it. Sorry I didn't comment, but albeit I think it's indeed an interesting new concept, at the moment I prefer to focus in a more readily available solution, the normal package. > > However, I believe that most people wanting more detail in that file, or > > another file, are aware of such limitations, > The main limitation is that it's a nuisance to update -- you can't > differentiate testing and unstable because of that, eg, and when we're due > for a release we end up having testing/unstable pretend they're really > stable already for a while, eg. Updating it more often just makes that > more of a nuisance. Well, in my first mail I said: | for this file to be meaningful, it would have to have three | branches, one uploaded via sid, another via t-p-u, and another via | s-p-u. In other words, I plan on uploading a version to sid, block it from migrating to testing, and uploading another version via t-p-u. Stable point releases will get updated via s-p-u. That makes it two initial uploads, and then twice per stable release (t-p-u; release; t-p-u), plus one per stable point release (s-p-u). As said in my previous mail, I'm willing to take care of that. Cheers, -- Adeodato Simó dato at net.com.org.es Debian Developer adeodato at debian.org La música es de los que la quieren escuchar y de nadie más. -- Andrés Calamaro -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]