Steve Langasek wrote: >> The Security Team is now using Request Tracker to coordinate work >> and our RT processes have already been refined a lot. >> If you're a package maintainer working towards a security update, >> you're now encouraged to open a ticket directly. You will be kept in >> CC during the life time of the ticket. If you're opening a ticket for >> a security problem, which is not yet publicly known, e.g. if you've >> discovered it by yourself or if you have been contacted by upstream, >> please open a ticket in the "Security - Private" queue. These >> issues will only be visible by the Security Team. > >> If you're opening a ticket for a security problem which is publicly >> known, e.g. if it's announced on the project web site, please open a >> ticket in the "Security" queue. These issues will be visible publicly. > > As far as I can see, this announcement mail doesn't mention where the RT > instance is running, nor the means of opening a ticket in the appropriate > queue. Where is this information available?
We're using the official rt.debian.org. Full details will be folded into the developer's reference soon. >> We're planning to improve our quality assurance process for security >> updates by providing a public security update beta test program in >> addition to the existing QA done for security updates. >> During the preparation of security updates, there's an inherent delay >> between the initial upload of the fixed packages and the time until >> the packages have been built on porter machines. This time gap will be >> used for a new security update beta program. The test program will be >> targeted at large installations, which install security updates in a >> test environment before installing them into the production >> environment. This test group will be initially limited. > > Is this meant to apply only to unembargoed security updates? AIUI, the > practice today is that for embargoed security updates, all of the binaries > are kept in the queue until they're ready for release; so I don't really see > a gap when the security update is public but the binary packages aren't > built? Yes, this is limited to non-embargoed security issues. Cheers, Moritz -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]