I am not walking away. The failure is 2 folds. If you got hit by -6, on
your machine the (broken) maintainer script gets installed, which you'll
have to manually remove.
That's something I do not want to handle in the package. Otherwise, the fix
to not break the maintainer script is done.

On Tue, Mar 15, 2016 at 10:40 PM, Sven Hartge <s...@svenhartge.de> wrote:

> On Tue, 15 Mar 2016 22:28:49 +0530 Ritesh Raj Sarraf <r...@debian.org>
> wrote:
>
> > If you upgrade from -5 to -7, you shouldn't be hitting this problem. I
> > thought about handling the breakage, but that would touch files outside
> > , which I'm not keen on.Â
> >
> > And Unstable is supposed to have breakages.
>
> Sorry, but I find this unacceptable. Sure, Unstable can have breakages,
> but is not supposed to have one. You cannot just ignore one upgrade path
> because it is inconvenient for you.
>
> The -6 package has been release to mirrors and has been installed on
> systems, so you have to provide a clean upgrade path to the next package
> and not just walk away saying "upgrade from -6 to -7 are not supported"
> and leave the user to manually put the package into a working state again.
>
> Grüße,
> Sven.
>
>


-- 
Ritesh Raj Sarraf
RESEARCHUT - http://www.researchut.com
"Necessity is the mother of invention."

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