Hello, I'm a long-time debian user that aspires to be a DD someday. I recently posted many RFS's on debian-mentors, some of which were software that I'm both the upstream author and packager of. These packages are native Debian packages, i.e. their source distribution is only one .tar.gz. It was pointed to me that packages should be preferably non-native, even if no source release without the debian/ subdir has ever existed.
I would like to ask whether there really is such a guideline, and if so, which are the technical / political reasons that lead to it. I have been informed about one technical detail, which is that when you only make changes to packaging, you only need to change the .diff.gz. However, I don't understand the benefit of this, and I've been maintaining my software as debian-native projects for many years, without any observable problems. Panu Kalliokoski ps. please cc me, because I'm not subscribing to -devel. -- personal contact: [EMAIL PROTECTED], +35841 5323835 technical contact: [EMAIL PROTECTED], http://www.iki.fi/atehwa/ PGP fingerprint: 0EA5 9D33 6590 FFD4 921C 5A5F BE85 08F1 3169 70EC -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]