On Sun, Jun 19, 2016 at 03:44:54PM -0700, Steve Langasek wrote: > snapd is available in Debian unstable for roughly the past two weeks.
Disclaimer: I've never used snap packages, and I haven't even read their documentation. https://packages.debian.org/sid/snapd indicates the package is in the Debian main archive. The rant[0] by adamw (which I'm sure isn't nice reading for the Ubuntu folk working on snaps and their tooling) indicates that the server end is not free software: Here’s another interesting thing about Snaps: the server end (the ‘app store’ bit of the equation) is closed source, Given that snapd therefore seems to be, in practice, only usable by Canonical's server, shouldn't the package be in contrib instead of main? At least until such time as there is a server side of this that can realistically be used with snapd (without changing its source) and that is free software. [0] https://www.happyassassin.net/2016/06/16/on-snappy-and-flatpak-business-as-usual-in-the-canonical-propaganda-department/ Furhter, the snapd package description is as follows: Description: Scripts for snapd that should only run on ubuntu core systems. This package contains systemd services that need to run on ubuntu core systems. . This package should not be installed on a Desktop system. This seems to not be relevant for a package that's meant to install snap pacxkages on a Debian system. I think it should be replaced by something that is more useful to a Debian user/sysadmin. -- Schrödinger's backup hypothesis: the condition of any backup is undefined until a restore is attempted. -- andrewsh
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