On Wed, May 08, 2019 at 03:57:08PM +0100, Ian Jackson wrote: > > both. > For packaging-only, dgit does not properly support that. Do you have > the upstream source in git form too, and if so how do you combine > them ? Do you manipulate patches using quilt ? [1]
hm/i'm sorry, I cannot really think of such an example of a package I'm maintaining. I've definitly encountered such packages though... > > could you be so kind and provide a pointer, this thread is rather long > > already? (Maybe this is also worth an FAQ entry somewhere..) > Sorry, I should have done that the first time. I'll reply to > Jonathan and you. thank you! > [1] I have to say that I think quilt is just awful. Perhaps your > mileage varies, [...] well, only sometimes. but then, it also does work. > I know it can be work to learn new stuff, and of course it's a pain if > lots of people are advising you to learn different and mutually > incompatible new stuff, but anyone who is still using quilt will > probably benefit a lot from learning how to use gitish tools instead. most of the time I deal with quilt is when I want to modify existing packages, usually not from sid, but from stable or older, and then it feels more straightforward to deal with quilt. often I just dget the sources (from an old release (*)), run git init ; git add * : git commit -m init and fiddle qith quilt & git until it applies nicely. that way, git really supports me nicely, without forcing me to learn anything. there's so much to learn all the time... (*) debcheckout is largely unusable for stretch and older as alioth is gone, so... meh. -- tschau, Holger ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- holger@(debian|reproducible-builds|layer-acht).org PGP fingerprint: B8BF 5413 7B09 D35C F026 FE9D 091A B856 069A AA1C
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