Hi Stefan!
On Wed, 05 Jul 2000, Stefan Alfredsson wrote:
> Is there a preferred way of handling new upstream versions?
You might want to manage your packages in CVS. It works really
great, I could not imagine a life without it.
Joey and Manoj even wrote a HOWTO[1].
so l
Hi Stefan!
On Wed, 05 Jul 2000, Stefan Alfredsson wrote:
> Is there a preferred way of handling new upstream versions?
You might want to manage your packages in CVS. It works really
great, I could not imagine a life without it.
Joey and Manoj even wrote a HOWTO[1].
so l
On Wed, 5 Jul 2000, Stefan Alfredsson wrote:
> Hello List,
>
> Is there a preferred way of handling new upstream versions?
>
> Eg. The two ways I can think of is
>
> - grabbing the new tarball and patch it with (my) package-diff.gz, dch and
> rebuild
> - diff t
Hello List,
Is there a preferred way of handling new upstream versions?
Eg. The two ways I can think of is
- grabbing the new tarball and patch it with (my) package-diff.gz, dch and
rebuild
- diff the new and old version, and patch my debian tree with it, dch and
rebuild
Regards,
Stefan
On Wed, 5 Jul 2000, Stefan Alfredsson wrote:
> Hello List,
>
> Is there a preferred way of handling new upstream versions?
>
> Eg. The two ways I can think of is
>
> - grabbing the new tarball and patch it with (my) package-diff.gz, dch and rebuild
> - diff the new an
Hello List,
Is there a preferred way of handling new upstream versions?
Eg. The two ways I can think of is
- grabbing the new tarball and patch it with (my) package-diff.gz, dch and rebuild
- diff the new and old version, and patch my debian tree with it, dch and rebuild
Regards,
Stefan
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