[Mail-Followup-To set to debian-emacsen.] I've been looking in to some of the issues surrounding current policy, and one common, long-standing complaint has been about the requirement that add-on packages depend either on emacsen, or on some combination of emacs flavors.
That requirement is what has led to the proliferation of tiny foo-el packages, since maintainers (understandably) don't want to add a very large dependency on say emacs23 to some package that otherwise only has incidental emacs relevance. After some investigation, it looks like we might be able to change policy to just require add-on packages to depend on emacsen-common, which is reasonably small, ~150k, and could probably become smaller if necessary. As yet, I haven't been able to come up with a good argument against relaxing the requirement, and I suspect doing so might obviate the need for many, if not all of the separate foo-el helper packages. Thoughts? -- Rob Browning rlb @defaultvalue.org and @debian.org GPG as of 2002-11-03 14DD 432F AE39 534D B592 F9A0 25C8 D377 8C7E 73A4 -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-devel-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/87wrt9srpq....@raven.defaultvalue.org