Le Sat, Mar 16, 2013 at 10:58:11PM +0100, Bill Allombert a écrit : > On Sat, Mar 09, 2013 at 10:51:45AM +0900, Charles Plessy wrote: > > > > I think that it emerges from the discussion that there are good uses of > > Unicode, and that somebody would need to step up and ensure that a dozen of > > packages are corrected if we were to restrict further the encoding of file > > names. Moreover, there seems to be a good self-discipline, and Unicode is > > not used in paths that are central on non-Unicode systems. > > I have yet to see any good use of 8bit finename in Debian binary packages.
Hi Bill, I undestand that you are critical with the idea of allowing 8bit file names. I am sorry if my brief summary could have given the impression that there is no "good" reason to refrain from using 8bit file names as well. At that point of the discussion, I do not see new arguments being added. We therefore need to move towards the resolution of this bug. I see the possible outcomes. a) Status quo: currently there is no policy, and we can decide to not write any policy instead of taking one that does not reach consensus. (not my favorite). b) Disallow non-UTF-8 encodings. This requires little work (which I started), answers to the original issue raised in this bug (there is no policy), and does not preclude further restrictions if there is consensus for doing so. c) Disallow non-ASCII encodings. This requires more work, and I am fairly confident to write that if nobody takes action and leads the correction of the affected packages in the archive, nothing will happen and we will not be able to make the corresponding change in the Policy. If we would tackle the issue with a Condorcet vote, I think that b) would be chosen, unless there are worries that once we reach b) it will not be possible to propose c) anymore. Personally, I trust that Debian's do-ocracy will work well, and that if there are developers determined to propose c) and make it happen if our community sees a benefit, being in the b) state will be a bonus, not a drawback. I nevertheless need to add that I personally think that b) is better than c), as shown by the summary that I wrote with too much bias (sorry again). Shall we go for b) ? Cheers, -- Charles Plessy Tsurumi, Kanagawa, Japan -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-policy-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/20130316232948.gb29...@falafel.plessy.net