On Tue, 21 Dec 1999, Branden Robinson wrote: > On Tue, Dec 21, 1999 at 02:54:26PM +0100, Santiago Vila wrote: > > On Tue, 21 Dec 1999, Branden Robinson wrote: > > > Do you intend to incorporate the changes I made in my NMU or should I just > > > forget about them? > > > > I incorporated many of them in 2.1.13. Thank you. > > > > You should probably forget about the others. > > Which ones did you discard? All of my changes were meritorious.
Read the changelog and/or download the source for 2.1.13. Just an example: The PATH for root is already defined in /root/.profile, so there is no need to make /etc/profile more complex. If the default /etc/profile does not suit your needs, you can always change it, that's why it is a configuration file. In short, I'm not willing to fix what is not broken. > > I welcome NMUs for fixing > > grave bugs like the one base-files had this weekend, but they have to > > follow the guidelines: You *have* to contact the maintainer by email no > > matter how urgent the bug may be ("I'm going to upload this if you don't > > answer this email before next dinstall run" is enough for me), > > I told you, for the purposes of the BugSquash, the prior notice requirement > was waived by the Project Leader and the Release Manager. If you have a > problem with that, take it up with them, not me. No. I can't believe that a single mail represents so much trouble to you. Did the Release Manager tell you that a prior notice was not required, or did he *forbid* you to make a prior notice? In the second case we have a big organizational problem. In the first case it's just an attitude problem from you. > > and you > > don't have to make any other extra change other than the rc-bug you intend > > to fix. > > I did you a favor by correcting other problems in your package. I agree you did a good thing by pointing out some things to be improved in the package, but there are a lot of ways to do the same, being NMUs one of the worst ones. Please read Developer's Reference 7.4, "How to do a source NMU", if you don't understand this. Thanks. -- "7caac1e81c7d3a75cc312eb66138f553" (a truly random sig)