Hallo! Du (Martin Michlmayr) hast geschrieben: >* Christian Kurz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [20001211 20:56]:
>> If he doesn't answer till this date, you should take then his >> package over, but that's only my suggestion how to deal with the >> situation as we have no standard guide for this problems. I'm not a Debian-Developer (yet, i've applied) so i think i can't take it over (yet). The guy who 'maintains' the package i want, hasn't touched the Bugreports since 11 Nov 98. (he has fixed some bugs that date, but didn't close the Reports, i've done that 3 or 4 days ago.) He is also responsible for the mailx-package, which hasn't been touched by him since mid-98, although there were appearing some security-related bugs, which had to be fixed through NMUs. >I think some guidelines should be developed. This question came up >quite often recently. I had the same problem a month ago, and there >was a posting to debian-mentors today asking the same... (ok, i'm new to these interna-lists of Debian, maybe my thoughts are thought many times on some lists, and also dumped into ground, for some good reasons. If this is the case, it would be nice if someone points me to the thread(s) in the mailarchive, so i can read it, and find out why i'm stupid ;-) Maybe there should be a 'ping mechanism' which sends every quarter of the year a mail-ping to a non-active Debian-Member (someone who doesn't write to lists, and hasn't open bugs to deal with) to which he/she has to respond. Also there should be a rule that developers have to add a response to an open bug within a month... (i'm not that happy with the bug-db, as it seems that often bugs won't be closed, but fixed, or they're simply ignored (maybe due to some disappeared developer.)) If there is no reaction the package(s) should be transfered to the QA-Group and marked 'Orphaned', because he can't (or don't want) match the quality demands of Debian. It is not that easy to become a Debian-Maintainer, and i think that those high expectations shouldn't end the day when one gets through it. I think Debian should also throw people out, if they can't (or want) match the Debian demands anymore. (Those people, who haven't got the time anymore, and give their responsibilities away to others are not meant here) comments? flames? Cord