On Thu, 30 Apr 1998, Marcus Brinkmann wrote: > On Thu, Apr 30, 1998 at 04:06:44AM -0500, Manoj Srivastava wrote: > > Hi, > > >>"Philip" == Philip Hands <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > > > I may have over reacted to being the lone voice crying in the > > wilderness bit. > > I prefer to keep away from such discussions until the air cleaned up a bit, > but for the sake of the people who count votes here are my 0.02$: > > I think the policy should be strictly followed. Exceptions to and errors in > the policy should be reported as a bug and properly included/fixed. The > policy should include a rationale where the reason is not obvious. It should > make clear what parts are required (must) and which are common practice > (should). I prefer a must over a should. > > People should not be angry when policy is wrong for them, but they should > happily work on the policy. The policy is not something that is forced on > the developers by some "higher person", but something the developers force > on *themselves*. You can only experience real freedom if you feel the border. > > In short, I agree with Manoj. > While I agree with much of what you say about the need for policy to be clear, I will continue to urge caution when being dictatorial about policy.
I only disagree with Manoj's characterization of my position. I have never said "Ignore policy if it suits you". What I have called for is a reasoned application of "The Policy Statement", which represents the current set of written policies. For example, the "stripped binaries" rule in the policy statement is fine with me. I don't see it as "broken" the way Manoj has suggested, because we have an unwritten policy against delivering broken packages. I see the unwritten policy as having a higher priority than the "stripped binaries" policy as written. While policy only states that the upstream changlog will be named changelog, I see the policy of "least surprise" as allowing me to include a link for ChangeLog so that those who are expecting that will find it. A strict reading of the Policy Statement might not lead others to this conclusion, but I don't see that as broken. I am willing to let those more interested in the location of comas etc. Luck, Dwarf -- _-_-_-_-_- Author of "The Debian Linux User's Guide" _-_-_-_-_-_- aka Dale Scheetz Phone: 1 (850) 656-9769 Flexible Software 11000 McCrackin Road e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Tallahassee, FL 32308 _-_-_-_-_-_- If you don't see what you want, just ask _-_-_-_-_-_-_- -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]