On Tue, Feb 11, 2020 at 11:34:23AM -0500, Louis-Philippe Véronneau wrote: > Looking at a package recently, I saw some important mistakes and I was > wondering: would it be ok to force push to fix them? > > More explicitly, the import of the new upstream version with > pristine-tar contains a bunch of errors due to a wrong manipulation. It > seems to me it would be "more clean" to start again and force push. > > I know force pushing is normally frowned upon when working in a team > environment, but I haven't seen any mention of it in the Python Team's > policy.
Let me keep frowing deeply. If pristine-tar data is corrupted, just use % pristine-tar commit ../foo_1.2.3.orig.tar.xz upstream/1.2.3 to update the data, without force-pushing. It's just one extra commit, so why would that be "less clean"?! The only thing I could *very frowingly* accept, is force-pushing a tag because you are doing it again. Having said that, I usually just append a number if I need to re-repack again an upstream tarball (+dfsg1, +dfsg2, etc). But you mentioned only pristine-tar, so I suppose that's not your case. -- regards, Mattia Rizzolo GPG Key: 66AE 2B4A FCCF 3F52 DA18 4D18 4B04 3FCD B944 4540 .''`. More about me: https://mapreri.org : :' : Launchpad user: https://launchpad.net/~mapreri `. `'` Debian QA page: https://qa.debian.org/developer.php?login=mattia `-
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