Hi! Lucas Nussbaum <lu...@debian.org> writes: > Also, we should be more agressive at getting down the number of RC bugs > by automatically removing RC-buggy not-so-important packages. For > example, if we keep the current time-based freeze policy for jessie, we > could announce that all not-so-important RC-buggy packages will be > removed from testing on freeze date.
I'm not so persuaded this will actually improve anything. During lenny freeze I've fixed a couple of these easy RC bugs on unmaintained leave packages when I had some 30 minutes of time and no good Idea of what to do. I have had similar timeslots too small to actually get into more difficult RC bugs but couldn't find anything to do during squeeze and especially wheezy freeze so I ended up doing *nothing*. Removing RC-buggy (and potentially not-taken-care-of) packages early may increase the average quality of software in the release (because these fixes mostly do exactly as much as is needed to fix the RC bug) but I'm far from persuaded it will increase release speed. Different thing for will-remove and dropping such packages late of course. Christoph -- 9FED 5C6C E206 B70A 5857 70CA 9655 22B9 D49A E731 Debian Developer | Lisp Hacker | CaCert Assurer -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-devel-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/8761ysbe09....@hepworth.siccegge.de