Hi all, I have a question regarding the jessie freeze policy. In the policy document (https://release.debian.org/jessie/freeze_policy.html) it says that one should "keep disruptive changes out of unstable and continue making use of experimental for changes that are not suitable for jessie."
I have just uploaded a new version of a package (new GenomeTools upstream version) to experimental, fixing many original upstream bugs and introducing new features. It is a dependency for another package and contains a library. As this new release contains a fix for a bug which has been quite common for a while and a major source of tickets in the upstream issue tracker, I would really like to make sure that a) current unstable users get the new version, and b) Ubuntu picks up the new version until their Debian import freeze in Feb 2015 (they import from unstable), do you see much in the way of uploading this package to unstable as well? Note that I am not asking for an unblock to get it into testing -- there are no RC bugs, and new upstream versions do not seem to be liked much for unblocks anyway. Unstable only will be perfectly fine for me. Maybe I could get some opinions... Thanks, Sascha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-med-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: https://lists.debian.org/548c24b3.6020...@steinbiss.name