* Daniel Kahn Gillmor:

> On 12/02/2009 02:00 PM, Florian Weimer wrote:
>> I misread the document.  non-free is definitely a possibility.
>
> If you think non-free is a reasonable choice for now, could you package
> up 1.34 and put it there while the request for DFSG-free licensing winds
> its way through whatever red tape it needs to?

I don't want to maintain packages in non-free.  But apart from that,
I think it's fine.

> i'd be up for taking over the package from you, but i'd want to know:
>
>  * how are you currently maintaining it?  For example, there are git
> references in debian/rules, but no Vcs-Git-* in debian/control.

There's a repository below <http://git.enyo.de/fw/debian/>, but I
think I botched my local copy, and actually uploaded the current
version without comitting everything.  I might have fixed that now,
but there are no guarantees that the version in the Git repository is
actually the official one.  Sorry about that. 8-(

(If you clone from there, not that that the box only has got about
1Mbps of bandwidth to the Internet, so it's kind of slow.)

> And i could find no indication of rationales (or details) for the
> changes that were made to make the package DFSG-Free.  looks like
> contrib was removed, as were drafts of rfc2629bis.  What made you
> decide these were not redistributable?  some of them (xml2rfcpp.pl,
> for example) appear to be explicitly placed in the public domain,
> for whatever that's worth.

Some of the example RFCs are non-free under Debian's policy.  Some
parts of contrib were not DFSG-compliant, either, and if there were
parts that were free software, I simply missed them.

>  * how are the requests for licensing changes being handled?  who are
> you currently in conversation with?  where do those conversations stand?
>  can i help out?

I asked on the tlp-interest list first, but that didn't lead to action
from the IETF, as far as I can tell.  I'm now following the official
procedure, as outlined in the TLP document.

> I'd like to have the latest version available so it's easy for debian
> folks to participate in the IETF process.  I'd also like to include
> idnits in the archive for the same reason, though it contains some
> boilerplate itself that i'm unclear on the licensing for.  perhaps it
> should just go in non-free as well.  ugh.

Yes, non-free seems to be the easiest option.

Other possible improvements for the packge: xml2rfc phones home, this
should be patched out.  The XSLT file could be integrated into
Debian's XML toolchain, I think, but I'm not sure how to do this (I
had some trouble integrating the DTD, but it should work now).



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