Le mercredi, 7 décembre 2016, 08.49:57 h CET Russell Stuart a écrit : > Why not have a formal rule that says if a package in Debian is out of > date for more than one release cycle any DD can package it under a > different name, after going through the usual ITP procedures coupled > with a bug report to the original package citing the ITP and a delay? > It's not like we don't do the parallel versions bit now - squid / > squid3, exim / exim4 and so on.
Or just the same, but without too many formalities: If one feels the source package isn't kept up-to-date enough, she can "just" file an ITP for a new source package name, pointing to hir attempts at convincing the existing maintainers. As ITPs are CC'ed to -devel, it becomes a matter of cultural shift in how we (and FTP Master, Release Team, etc) accept parallel versions in the archive (same software in different source & binary package names). With snapshots.debian.org and LTS in place, we could also start accepting that there is a variety of cases where it's entirely fine to instruct users to install versions from past stable versions. (lsb-desktop in Wheezy had such instructions, if one needed to get Qt3, e.g.) -- Cheers, OdyX