I do all my work on Debian Slink i386, but just made a potato install on Alpha. To my surprise, some of my packages are broken wrt the /usr/share issue on alpha. Note that these are packages that I haven't upgraded yet wrt this issue, and so they are stated in the control file to be compliant to policy version 2.4.1 (and not 3.0.1).
$ dpkg -L xwatch [cut] /usr/doc /usr/doc/xwatch /usr/doc/xwatch/html /usr/doc/xwatch/html/xwatch.html /usr/doc/xwatch/html/xwatch01.html /usr/doc/xwatch/html/xwatch02.html /usr/doc/xwatch/html/xwatch03.html /usr/doc/xwatch/html/xwatch04.html /usr/doc/xwatch/html/xwatch05.html /usr/doc/xwatch/html/index.html /usr/doc/xwatch/xwatch.txt /usr/share /usr/share/doc /usr/share/doc/xwatch /usr/share/doc/xwatch/copyright /usr/share/doc/xwatch/changelog.gz /usr/share/doc/xwatch/README.debian /usr/share/doc/xwatch/MAINTAINER.README /usr/share/doc/xwatch/xwatch.README /usr/share/doc/xwatch/changelog.Debian.gz [cut] My rules file installed the html files by hand in /usr/doc/xwatch/html/ and debstd installed the other doc files (readme, changelog and copyright). I'm guessing a _lot_ of ported packages will be broken like this since maybe developers use a combination of hand-rolling commands and either debmake or debhelper commands in their rules file. As soon as a policy package is uploaded that is compliant with the technical committee's decision on this issue, I plan to upload new versions of all my packages such that they will be rebuilt in all arches. But if many developers don't do this for potato, I'm sure non-i386 architectures will have a messy potato release! -- Peter Galbraith, research scientist <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Maurice Lamontagne Institute, Department of Fisheries and Oceans Canada P.O. Box 1000, Mont-Joli Qc, G5H 3Z4 Canada. 418-775-0852 FAX: 775-0546 6623'rd GNU/Linux user at the Counter - http://counter.li.org/