On Thu, 14 May 2009 18:11:38 +1000 Ben Finney <ben+deb...@benfinney.id.au> wrote:
> Andrea Bolognani <e...@kiyuko.org> writes: > > > Since the upstream website has been redesigned, the watch file for one > > of my packages[1] has stopped working. > > Which leaves your package with a new bug: a ‘debian/watch’ file that no > longer works. Right? Right. > > The fix is a trivial one-line patch, so I was wondering if such a > > minor change could warrant a new upload. > > Many critical security bug fixes are trivial one-line patches. Why would > the size of the patch be a factor in whether you should make a new > release? > > Yes, certainly fixing any bug (even one not yet reported) is enough > justification for making a new release. The main difference I can see is that this bug only affects the Debian ifrastructure, as opposed to a security bug, which affects users. I don't think it is worth it to upload a new version of a package just to fix a small bug which doesn't affect users at all, but I wanted to hear some opinions. I will go the way suggested by Alexander, i.e. report a bug myself and tag it as pending. But I'll be sure to contact you once I need a sponsor to upload a new version of beef ;) -- Andrea Bolognani <e...@kiyuko.org> Resistance is futile, you will be garbage collected.
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