On 01/01/15 15:37, t.j.duch...@gmail.com wrote:
I just wanted to post this for consideration. I’m not looking to rehash old posts, but Devuan is at the moment finding its legs. I feel that this is a valid concern that may arise in Devuan’s future. I think it should be discussed openly.

http://threatpost.com/debian-announces-end-of-security-support-for-iceape/103203

Assuming that we follow upstream Debian “en masse”, do we have the resources to for vetting every upstream package that Debian provides or are we going to simply take them on faith and try to keep sync with Debian’s patches?

I’ve often advocated the idea that Devuan should focus on a “core” and leave the rest of Debian to interested parties willing to maintain it. Regardless of the outcome of that discussion, the update and security model should be visited at some point.


I see your point with the need to prioritize core items, in fact on a rather larger, more established scale that is what Debian is doing in this case.

I don't think Devuan should fork any more than has to be forked to remain systemd free for now or into the immediate (Stretch/sid) future. If at some point that requires support or replacement of software abandoned by Debian, that is what it will take.

Most of us were happy to accept the wisdom of Debian or work around it as benefactors/users for a number of years, to me Devuan is pretty much an ultimate extension of that now that something is poettentially rotting the heart of the Debian distro.

I guess what I'm trying to say is things get worked around and that is what I feel is happening at the heart of Devuan development even if this mailing list reflects a larger more abstract vision.

Maybe in the future Devuan will eat Debian or the other way around, who knows.

Talking of work arounds, if I was faced with a single soul who needed IceApe on a machine, I would give them the still updated SeaMonkey, stuffed in their userspace.

One thing is for sure, this is all being well documented so future generations can look upon these happenings and see a ground breaking rift created to maintain the flexibility of the GNU/Linux operating system. I'm thinking that, rather than the parallel of a bunch of old Netscape Navigator users worrying about their rebadged, handy, meta-package. History is live streamed these days, so time will tell.

Don't take the above analysis too seriously and stick in smiley's (-: as may seem appropriate.

--
Clarke









_______________________________________________
Dng mailing list
Dng@lists.dyne.org
https://mailinglists.dyne.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/dng

Reply via email to