Ian Jackson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Frank Küster writes ("Re: Bug#375502: debian-policy must clarify how > sub-policies should be managed"): >> For a document called "Debian-Foo-Policy" to be part of The Debian >> Policy it must be included in 1.4. If it is not included there, it is >> not mandatory policy. How is that unclear? > > The list in 1.4 isn't necessarily complete.
I think this would be a bug, see below. > If you write the Debian TeX policy then it's just as normative as the > debian-policy manual. [...] > Note the following principle: a document is normative if and only if > the official decisionmaking processes apply to it. If with "the official decisionmaking processes" you mean the procedure described in /usr/share/doc/debian-policy/policy-process.*, then I fully agree. But this decisionmaking process does not apply to the (current) Debian TeX policy. It was just written by a small couple of people, without any formalism. I think any patch that, following the described decisionmaking process, is submitted as a bug against the debian-policy package is incomplete if it does not include a hunk that patches section 1.4. Therefore it's a bug if a new sub-policy gets accepted without mentioning it in 1.4. Regards, Frank -- Frank Küster Single Molecule Spectroscopy, Protein Folding @ Inst. f. Biochemie, Univ. Zürich Debian Developer (teTeX)