Re: the incoming queue for non-US?

2001-01-26 Thread Adrian Bunk

On Fri, 26 Jan 2001, Rick Younie wrote:

...
  Not really. If the sponsor does not change the changelog entry, email
  goes to whomever is listed there (at least that's how it behaved the last
  time I sponsored someone).

 I found the easiest way to do this is for the sponsor to build the
 package with

   dpkg-buildpackage -rfakeroot -k"your key"

 where "your key" identifies the key the sponsor wants to sign
 with.

 That way the NM gets the install email and bug reports directly.
...

I prefer the following way to achieve this:

The package gets build using
  dpkg-buildpackage -us -uc -rfakeroot

and I sign it then using
  debsign -m'Adrian Bunk' package.changes
before I upload it.


 Rick


cu,
Adrian

-- 
A "No" uttered from deepest conviction is better and greater than a
"Yes" merely uttered to please, or what is worse, to avoid trouble.
-- Mahatma Ghandi


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Re: the incoming queue for non-US?

2001-01-26 Thread Rick Younie
Henrique M Holschuh wrote:
 On Fri, 26 Jan 2001, Junichi Uekawa wrote:

 AFAIK a sponsored upload means all the email is received by the sponser,
 and not the sponsored.
 
 Not really. If the sponsor does not change the changelog entry, email
 goes to whomever is listed there (at least that's how it behaved the last
 time I sponsored someone).

I found the easiest way to do this is for the sponsor to build the
package with

  dpkg-buildpackage -rfakeroot -kyour key

where your key identifies the key the sponsor wants to sign
with.

That way the NM gets the install email and bug reports directly.

And if the sponsor puts his name/email in the comment field in
his GPG options file -- see benc's key sig for an example -- it's
immediately apparent who the sponsor is in case of problems.
This information is in the signature itself of course.

Rick
-- 



Re: the incoming queue for non-US?

2001-01-26 Thread Adrian Bunk
On Fri, 26 Jan 2001, Rick Younie wrote:

...
  Not really. If the sponsor does not change the changelog entry, email
  goes to whomever is listed there (at least that's how it behaved the last
  time I sponsored someone).

 I found the easiest way to do this is for the sponsor to build the
 package with

   dpkg-buildpackage -rfakeroot -kyour key

 where your key identifies the key the sponsor wants to sign
 with.

 That way the NM gets the install email and bug reports directly.
...

I prefer the following way to achieve this:

The package gets build using
  dpkg-buildpackage -us -uc -rfakeroot

and I sign it then using
  debsign -m'Adrian Bunk' package.changes
before I upload it.


 Rick


cu,
Adrian

-- 
A No uttered from deepest conviction is better and greater than a
Yes merely uttered to please, or what is worse, to avoid trouble.
-- Mahatma Ghandi



Re: the incoming queue for non-US?

2001-01-25 Thread Hamish Moffatt

On Wed, Jan 24, 2001 at 05:36:38PM +0100, Domenico Andreoli wrote:
 i'm looking for the incoming queue for non-US. as i see in the debian
 developer reference, it seems it is reserved only for debian developer.

All of the upload queues are reserved for developers. The indirect queues
will allow anonymous FTP uploads, but the uploads will not actually
be processed and installed into Debian without a PGP or GPG signature
from a Debian developer.


Hamish
-- 
Hamish Moffatt VK3SB [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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Re: the incoming queue for non-US?

2001-01-25 Thread Domenico Andreoli

On Thu, Jan 25, 2001 at 09:06:18PM +1100, Hamish Moffatt wrote:
 On Wed, Jan 24, 2001 at 05:36:38PM +0100, Domenico Andreoli wrote:
  i'm looking for the incoming queue for non-US. as i see in the debian
  developer reference, it seems it is reserved only for debian developer.
 
 All of the upload queues are reserved for developers. The indirect queues
 will allow anonymous FTP uploads, but the uploads will not actually
 be processed and installed into Debian without a PGP or GPG signature
 from a Debian developer.
 

yes i know, that's right.

what i'd like to do is to check what has been uploaded by my sponsor and to
look at the reports in case of rejection.

for main i look at http://incoming.debian.org, for non-US?



-[ Domenico Andreoli, aka cavok
 --[ http://filibusta.crema.unimi.it/~cavok/gpgkey.asc
   ---[ 3A0F 2F80 F79C 678A 8936  4FEE 0677 9033 A20E BC50

 PGP signature


Re: the incoming queue for non-US?

2001-01-25 Thread Josip Rodin

On Thu, Jan 25, 2001 at 01:43:29PM +0100, Domenico Andreoli wrote:
   i'm looking for the incoming queue for non-US. as i see in the debian
   developer reference, it seems it is reserved only for debian developer.
  
  All of the upload queues are reserved for developers. The indirect queues
  will allow anonymous FTP uploads, but the uploads will not actually
  be processed and installed into Debian without a PGP or GPG signature
  from a Debian developer.
 
 what i'd like to do is to check what has been uploaded by my sponsor and to
 look at the reports in case of rejection.
 
 for main i look at http://incoming.debian.org, for non-US?

There's no public access to non-US Incoming AFAIR. Anyway, you should get a
REJECT email from dinstall if the package gets rejected and you're listed as
its maintainer... or something like that.

-- 
Digital Electronic Being Intended for Assassination and Nullification


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Re: the incoming queue for non-US?

2001-01-25 Thread Junichi Uekawa

In Thu, 25 Jan 2001 19:29:21 +0100 Josip Rodin [EMAIL PROTECTED] cum veritate 
scripsit :

  what i'd like to do is to check what has been uploaded by my sponsor
 and to
  look at the reports in case of rejection.
  
  for main i look at http://incoming.debian.org, for non-US?
 
 There's no public access to non-US Incoming AFAIR. Anyway, you should
 get a
 REJECT email from dinstall if the package gets rejected and you're
 listed as
 its maintainer... or something like that.

AFAIK a sponsored upload means all the email is received by the sponser,
and not the sponsored.

i.e. the sponsored person has a very difficult time without
any clue.


# and no, non-developer cannot do "dinstall -n" or anything fancy like that.


regards,
junichi

--
University: [EMAIL PROTECTED]Netfort: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Debian: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
dancer, a.k.a. Junichi Uekawa   http://www.netfort.gr.jp/~dancer
 Dept. of Knowledge Engineering and Computer Science, Doshisha University.


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Re: the incoming queue for non-US?

2001-01-25 Thread Henrique M Holschuh

On Fri, 26 Jan 2001, Junichi Uekawa wrote:
 In Thu, 25 Jan 2001 19:29:21 +0100 Josip Rodin [EMAIL PROTECTED] cum veritate 
scripsit :
  There's no public access to non-US Incoming AFAIR. Anyway, you should
  get a
  REJECT email from dinstall if the package gets rejected and you're
  listed as
  its maintainer... or something like that.
 
 AFAIK a sponsored upload means all the email is received by the sponser,
 and not the sponsored.

Not really. If the sponsor does not change the changelog entry, email
goes to whomever is listed there (at least that's how it behaved the last
time I sponsored someone).

-- 
  "One disk to rule them all, One disk to find them. One disk to bring
  them all and in the darkness grind them. In the Land of Redmond
  where the shadows lie." -- The Silicon Valley Tarot
  Henrique Holschuh

 PGP signature


Re: the incoming queue for non-US?

2001-01-25 Thread Hamish Moffatt
On Wed, Jan 24, 2001 at 05:36:38PM +0100, Domenico Andreoli wrote:
 i'm looking for the incoming queue for non-US. as i see in the debian
 developer reference, it seems it is reserved only for debian developer.

All of the upload queues are reserved for developers. The indirect queues
will allow anonymous FTP uploads, but the uploads will not actually
be processed and installed into Debian without a PGP or GPG signature
from a Debian developer.


Hamish
-- 
Hamish Moffatt VK3SB [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: the incoming queue for non-US?

2001-01-25 Thread Domenico Andreoli
On Thu, Jan 25, 2001 at 09:06:18PM +1100, Hamish Moffatt wrote:
 On Wed, Jan 24, 2001 at 05:36:38PM +0100, Domenico Andreoli wrote:
  i'm looking for the incoming queue for non-US. as i see in the debian
  developer reference, it seems it is reserved only for debian developer.
 
 All of the upload queues are reserved for developers. The indirect queues
 will allow anonymous FTP uploads, but the uploads will not actually
 be processed and installed into Debian without a PGP or GPG signature
 from a Debian developer.
 

yes i know, that's right.

what i'd like to do is to check what has been uploaded by my sponsor and to
look at the reports in case of rejection.

for main i look at http://incoming.debian.org, for non-US?



-[ Domenico Andreoli, aka cavok
 --[ http://filibusta.crema.unimi.it/~cavok/gpgkey.asc
   ---[ 3A0F 2F80 F79C 678A 8936  4FEE 0677 9033 A20E BC50


pgpOSjUYi5JiJ.pgp
Description: PGP signature


Re: the incoming queue for non-US?

2001-01-25 Thread Josip Rodin
On Thu, Jan 25, 2001 at 01:43:29PM +0100, Domenico Andreoli wrote:
   i'm looking for the incoming queue for non-US. as i see in the debian
   developer reference, it seems it is reserved only for debian developer.
  
  All of the upload queues are reserved for developers. The indirect queues
  will allow anonymous FTP uploads, but the uploads will not actually
  be processed and installed into Debian without a PGP or GPG signature
  from a Debian developer.
 
 what i'd like to do is to check what has been uploaded by my sponsor and to
 look at the reports in case of rejection.
 
 for main i look at http://incoming.debian.org, for non-US?

There's no public access to non-US Incoming AFAIR. Anyway, you should get a
REJECT email from dinstall if the package gets rejected and you're listed as
its maintainer... or something like that.

-- 
Digital Electronic Being Intended for Assassination and Nullification



Re: the incoming queue for non-US?

2001-01-25 Thread Junichi Uekawa
In Thu, 25 Jan 2001 19:29:21 +0100 Josip Rodin [EMAIL PROTECTED] cum veritate 
scripsit :

  what i'd like to do is to check what has been uploaded by my sponsor
 and to
  look at the reports in case of rejection.
  
  for main i look at http://incoming.debian.org, for non-US?
 
 There's no public access to non-US Incoming AFAIR. Anyway, you should
 get a
 REJECT email from dinstall if the package gets rejected and you're
 listed as
 its maintainer... or something like that.

AFAIK a sponsored upload means all the email is received by the sponser,
and not the sponsored.

i.e. the sponsored person has a very difficult time without
any clue.


# and no, non-developer cannot do dinstall -n or anything fancy like that.


regards,
junichi

--
University: [EMAIL PROTECTED]Netfort: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Debian: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
dancer, a.k.a. Junichi Uekawa   http://www.netfort.gr.jp/~dancer
 Dept. of Knowledge Engineering and Computer Science, Doshisha University.



Re: the incoming queue for non-US?

2001-01-25 Thread Henrique M Holschuh
On Fri, 26 Jan 2001, Junichi Uekawa wrote:
 In Thu, 25 Jan 2001 19:29:21 +0100 Josip Rodin [EMAIL PROTECTED] cum 
 veritate scripsit :
  There's no public access to non-US Incoming AFAIR. Anyway, you should
  get a
  REJECT email from dinstall if the package gets rejected and you're
  listed as
  its maintainer... or something like that.
 
 AFAIK a sponsored upload means all the email is received by the sponser,
 and not the sponsored.

Not really. If the sponsor does not change the changelog entry, email
goes to whomever is listed there (at least that's how it behaved the last
time I sponsored someone).

-- 
  One disk to rule them all, One disk to find them. One disk to bring
  them all and in the darkness grind them. In the Land of Redmond
  where the shadows lie. -- The Silicon Valley Tarot
  Henrique Holschuh


pgps8w4o8vyk3.pgp
Description: PGP signature


the incoming queue for non-US?

2001-01-24 Thread Domenico Andreoli

hi all

i'm looking for the incoming queue for non-US. as i see in the debian
developer reference, it seems it is reserved only for debian developer.

thanks for any help

-[ Domenico Andreoli, aka cavok
 --[ http://filibusta.crema.unimi.it/~cavok/gpgkey.asc
   ---[ 3A0F 2F80 F79C 678A 8936  4FEE 0677 9033 A20E BC50

 PGP signature


the incoming queue for non-US?

2001-01-24 Thread Domenico Andreoli
hi all

i'm looking for the incoming queue for non-US. as i see in the debian
developer reference, it seems it is reserved only for debian developer.

thanks for any help

-[ Domenico Andreoli, aka cavok
 --[ http://filibusta.crema.unimi.it/~cavok/gpgkey.asc
   ---[ 3A0F 2F80 F79C 678A 8936  4FEE 0677 9033 A20E BC50


pgpnaQpTXag1q.pgp
Description: PGP signature