Pierre Habouzit wrote:
> On Tue, Aug 04, 2009 at 10:29:11AM +0100, Steve Langasek wrote:
>   
>> I'm sorry that you have a negative impression of Ubuntu's relationship
>> with Debian, but there's plenty of data available that contradicts
>> your conclusion (including BTS reports that have been posted to this
>> very thread).
>>     
>
> The problem is there is also plenty of data, like for example the recent
> #539950 (on a package never uploaded to Debian) which is looking a _lot_
> like LP#408901. In this bug, the Ubuntu developer is (IMHO) trying to
> make the Debian one find, fix and patch the bug for him.
>
> The problem is (as a DD) that I would expect Ubuntu to collaborate the
> most on the harder core packages, meaning the toolchain, the kernel,
> X... Alas, it happens more coincidentally than on a regular basis, and
> that saddens me.
>
> I'm not saying there aren't any working cases of cooperation, and I
> welcome them. But there are way too many example of bad (or rather
> inexistant) cooperation, or even dirty tricks like #539950, which
> undermines the former tries a lot.
>   
Pierre,

When you have two large, complex, passionate organisations there will
always be plenty of opportunities to find fault with one another. Do you
not believe that it would be possible to find a long list of cases where
Debian developers have acted in a way that made collaboration difficult
or impossible, or could be interpreted as bad faith? Of course it would.

Nevertheless, we never let those incidents poison our commitment to
working better with Debian. On balance, when I look at the huge effort
that has gone into better collaboration with Debian, from many core and
MOTU developers in Ubuntu, I think we should celebrate those successes
and inspire people to do more of that, rather than taking every
opportunity to find fault.

In this conversation, there are large groups of people who's starting
assumption is that "Ubuntu is bad", or "Debian is difficult", and they
find facts to support that assumption. Fair enough, that's human nature.
But it will never improve the state of the world to focus on things that
people believe are absolute - if you want to improve the state of the
world, you need to look for opportunities to make it better.

Instead of saying "there's a bug that was badly handled, so we should
never collaborate better on anything", let's look for opportunities to
make things better. We have a good opportunity to make a profound change
in the way upstreams and distributions engage. A change that will really
help the whole free software ecosystem, and many distributions beyond
Ubuntu and Debian. Isn't it worth exploring that idea for its full value?

Mark

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