Oliver Elphick writes: > I remember seeing a draft Python policy some time ago but it is not > linked from http://www.debian.org/devel/
see /usr/share/doc/python. It currently in a "proposed" state, I think we won't submit it as formal policy for sarge. > The reason I am looking for it is that I need to decide what to do with > the postgresql package. > > The current package (7.3.4-8) contains the binary packages > python-pygresql and python{x.x}-pygresql. In the next release PyGreSQL > will have a separate source package, so those binary packages will be > dropped. > > The postgresql binary package also contains the PL/Python procedural > language. This is a shared library linked with python2.1 (python 2.2 > and 2.3 don't work, because in PostgreSQL 7.3.4 there is no untrusted > PL/Python). In PostgreSQL 7.4 it will link with python 2.3. > > In the experimental release of PostgreSQL 7.4, I disabled the python > config option, forgetting that PL/Python is still there even though > PyGreSQL has gone. Therefore I have to restore PL/Python; but I would > like to make sure it is done according to policy. So I have some > questions. > > 1. Is it OK accoding to policy to link against python 2.3 only? yes. same as with vim-python. > 2. Should there be a separate binary package for PL/Python or is it > OK to include it in postgresql? (The total number of files is > one, /usr/lib/postgresql/lib/plpython.so.) Pl/perl and PL/Tcl > are in libpgperl and libpgtcl respectively, but those packages > also contain libraries for front-end connections (similar to > PyGreSQL). I think that's your choice. Matthias