Quoting Ana Guerrero (a...@debian.org): > I know this is done with the best intentions but if you think the package > is in bad shape or neglected by the maintainer then it might better write > to mia@, debian-qa@ or open a bug asking whether the package should be > orphaned (or even removed). Both examples below are candidates to be orphaned.
I have many of these in the packages I do NMU for l10n purposes. My current policy is to fix my initial goal (debconf l10n) and a few "obvious" QA things, by drawing the line to things I judge as "enough non-disruptive": - fixes in debian/copyright (GPL-2, missing complete copyright statements...) - ${misc:Depends} in dependencies - move to "1.0" source format mentioned explicitly (I think that "3.0 (quilt)" would be "too much") - when debhelper compat is 4 or below, either: - bump it to 5 if the packaging is tooc complicated for me to investigate - bump it to 7 with minimal changes (usually "dh_clean -k" -> dh_prep) for simple packages....and doing a little bit more check that it doesn't break anything (it generally doesn't as I of course do *not* change anything else in debian/rules) - "_Choices" -> "__Choices" in debconf templates - "Homepage:" in debian/control - and any other lintian warning I consider "safe" to fix ("safe" usually means that I am able to fix it in a couple of seconds...because this is a change I already did in many other packages) I do this because I regard l10n uploads (NMU or not) as QA uploads already anyway. I keep a full reference of packages I NMU'ed and I intend to spend a few days in a near future in sending a notice to the MIA team about those packages I NMU'ed this way without any sign of life from the maintainer. Several of these packages looks very loosely maintained. There, it's harder to say whether there abandoned or not or if they should be orphaned. I personnally see my own NMUs as a sign that the package might be a good candidate for orphaning|removal..... Still, most often, these packages don't have many bug reports....they just seem to be living their life quietly in the archive without much need for attention..:-)
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