On Fri, Jul 20, 2012 at 08:57:45AM +1000, Paul Gear wrote:
> 
> I agree with Jonathan.  With my non-packager, mostly-non-developer hat
> on, i think that keeping the versions lock-stepped follows the principle
> of least surprise for Shorewall's users.  It might save hours of effort
> for developers & packagers by not having them lock-stepped, but it will
> save hundreds of hours of confusion and dozens of questions on the
> mailing list if we keep it the way it is.
> 
On the flip side, Debian has just entered the freeze period for the next
stable release.  So, any new releases introduced into Debian must
reeceive a freeze exception in order to be allowed to propogate.  Since
it is the practice of the release managers to not allow gratiutous
changes, I have to choose one of these options:

1) (assuming all packages are released each time) I upload only the
   packages which actually changed (potentially confuses users since the
   Debian packages get out of sync with respect to version numbers
   i.e., they are not all in lock step)

2) (assuming all packages are released each time) I patch in the
   specific changes and upload them as a new Debian revision, which
   risks confusing users even more

3) (assuming only changed packages are released each time) I keep the
   Debian packages in sync and there is no confusion since upstream and
   Debian match up

Personally, I like the last option, since that would be the "least
surprise" to me (and I would think to users).  Of course, there are
people out there using just upstream packages or just Debian packages,
and they are not likely to be affected inconsistencies between available
versions of Debian packages and upstream packages.

Incidentally. when Debian is not frozen, this is not a major issu since
I can make "gratiutous" uploads and no special action is required in
order to get the packages propogated to testing.

Also, keep in mind that there are other software systems out there that
are modular in nature that do not keep all components in lock step.  For
example, the Horde framework has lots of different components.
Sometimes releases are synchronized, but oftentimes they are not.

Regards,

-Roberto

-- 
Roberto C. Sánchez
http://people.connexer.com/~roberto
http://www.connexer.com

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