>>"Julian" == Julian Gilbey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Julian> On Fri, Apr 13, 2001 at 02:22:54AM +1000, Anthony Towns wrote: >> So we no longer accept uploads of packages that don't have manpages for >> all their binaries? Julian> OK, let's take this example then. At the moment it's only a "should". Julian> Why can't we say that, from now on, we will not accept uploads which Julian> fail this? If you can get the ftp/katie admin/authors to agree, I can't see why not. You all may have some explaining to do, but ... Julian> My suggestion is: change "should" to "must" in policy, and give Julian> packages some time to migrate (eg., one year) before starting to do Julian> NMUs. Then any packages uploaded within the coming year will have to Julian> satisfy this requirement (or have a lintian override if there's a Julian> special reason why they don't need to). You are trying to correct a social issue (it is already a should directive; people should correct the buggy packages) with a technical solution, and it is going to fail. You are going to dilute the meaning of the meaning of must == right now must means ``if not fixed, your package won't go into the release/ The new meaning shall be, something that needs to be fixed sometime, but ot may ot yet be a RC bug; from your own message that is apparently a disincentive for people to act. As to removing the "undocumented.7" man pages, we can enact a policy saying that it needs a normal bug at the creation, in 6 months (or whatever) an automated process shall go through and raise the severity to RC. No mucking around and fiddling with the strong must in policy. >> > - we don't file RC bugs on new requirements until we decide that it >> > is necessary and that we are realistically able to fix any packages >> > with the issue outstanding in a reasonable length of time >> >> Indeed. We can do this right now by making them recommendations (should) >> instead of requirements (must), and update them later if it's appropriate. Julian> So one day you have a minor bug report against your package, the next Julian> day it becomes an RC bug report with the threat of your package being Julian> pulled. No. We just keep the time-line in collective memory, and informative footnotes, rather than policy itself; and we follow the rule that policy changes never make a significant number of packages un-releasable. Julian> Problems: Julian> (1) Many maintainers ignore policy changes and don't apply them to Julian> their packages. The above statistics give some indication of the Julian> extent of this problem. Social problem, needs a social solution. Julian> (2) We don't enforce policy dictates except by filing RC bugs at a Julian> very late stage in the process, once we've decided that the Julian> requirement should be an absolute. We can also file non-RC bugs earlier in the process, when thery are merely a should directive. Another social problem. Julian> (3) The above two points mean that it is hard to maintain a high Julian> quality of packages in any automated fashion, and that a large Julian> burden is put on a small number of developers who try to fix the Julian> problems thereby caused, for example the /usr/doc -> Julian> /usr/share/doc transition is still not complete. And making policy a bigger stick shall not solve the problem either. Julian> (4) It also means that we are often afraid to "do the right thing" Julian> and demand that packages satisfy certain criteria (all binaries Julian> to have manpages) because too many packages will then receive RC Julian> bugs, even though we should demand this of all packages and it Julian> really isn't an RC issue. In some ways, that is a sanity check. Make policy too strict, and it shan;t be followed (you guessed it -- a social problem). Policy tries to do the right thing, for the most part -- but it also tries to stay relevant, by not suddenly making a whole lot of packages RC. Diluting must does not answer this issue. Even after diluting must, we shall need an external mechanism for declaring some ``must'' directive now to be RC, and have this external entity enforce the social issues by, I guess, filing RC bugs on the diluted must, and facing a barrage of that must is not yet RC arguments. Julian> (5) There is only language in policy for "this is an RC requirement" Julian> and "this is a requirement, but not RC". Both indicate bugs if Julian> there is a failure to comply. There is no language for: "except Julian> in unusual circumstances, you must do this", which would not Julian> necessarily indicate a bug for lack of compliance. (For example, Julian> the update-rc.d binary in file-rc need not have a manpage, as it Julian> depends on sysvinit which does. So maybe the manpage requirement Julian> really ought to be a "should" or needs to explicitly exclude this Julian> type of case.) There are always exceptions, and the tech committee is ready to be called in to decide when an exception to the policy is warranted. Julian> Proposal: Julian> (a) Package uploads into unstable must comply with the latest version Julian> of policy (or be no more than, say, one month out of date). Julian> Suggested implementation: lintian could be used to do this, with Julian> a strict check on the Standards-Version. It would probably be a Julian> slightly rough ride to begin with, but worth it in the long term. Julian> We'd need to figure out what to do with lintian overrides though: Julian> perhaps "must"s could not be overridden but "should"s could be? This is an administrative decision, and does not belong in a technical policy. Julian> (b) The release manager decides upon a minimum acceptable Julian> Standards-Version for each release once (a) has been implemented. Julian> Most packages will automatically satisfy this requirement due to Julian> the enforcement in (a), especially if the minimum version is no Julian> later that that of the previous released version; I would guess Julian> that >90% of packages are uploaded at least once per year. Again, this is the domain of the release manager, and does not belong in policy. Julian> (c) Urgent requirements could be dealt with using the current RC bug Julian> method after being discussed on -policy. Julian> Then, as a *corollary* of the above, "must" and "should" would need to Julian> change their meanings, as we would have a different way of determining Julian> which policy bugs are RC, given in (b). GTiven my arguments above, I guess I still need to be convinced not to object to diluting the meaning of must. manoj -- "I asked you not to have a spaz attack in tx.general, BUT NOOOOO!!!!" Karl, via John Belushi Manoj Srivastava <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <http://www.debian.org/%7Esrivasta/> 1024R/C7261095 print CB D9 F4 12 68 07 E4 05 CC 2D 27 12 1D F5 E8 6E 1024D/BF24424C print 4966 F272 D093 B493 410B 924B 21BA DABB BF24 424C