* Goswin von Brederlow [Sun, 11 Jun 2006 19:49:50 +0200]: > David Weinehall <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> On Fri, Jun 09, 2006 at 10:04:48PM +0200, Bill Allombert wrote: >>> Sometimes, the changelog will tell you the package was last changed 3 >>> month ago while actually it was changed yesterday and build and uploaded >>> today. This can lead you to go on a wild-goose chase if you do not know >>> about the problem. [snip] >>> Sure but adding entries to the changelog does not magically update the >>> date. > > Then I suggest you start using dch. > Or an editor mode/plugin/whatever that updates the time on save in > changelogs. Very usefull. And hateful (IMHO) when this results in every commit you do in your debian packaging in changes in the timestamp of the changelog (and for co-maintained packages, the name as well). I've thought about this several times, and I think what'd make me happy would be, instead of this dist=UNRELEASED stuff to mark work in progress in VCS, something like: package (1.1) unstable; urgency=low [ Joe Random ] * Foo. -- UNRELEASED And then, dch -r would be run by the person uploading, placing their name and current timestamp in the final changelog, optionally removing the "[Joe Random]" bit iff there is no other name tag, and Joe Random is the one uploading. Pity that dpkg-parsechangelog would choke on that, and also, I haven't heard anybody express discontent about this, so maybe I'm too picky, which makes me think that everybody is happy with using dist=UNRELEASED and updating the timestamp with each commit (or not doing, and risk forgetting to do so the last time before uploading). Cheers, (I guess followups should go to -devel and not -policy.) -- Adeodato Simó dato at net.com.org.es Debian Developer adeodato at debian.org Listening to: Joan Manuel Serrat - Soy lo prohibido -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]